The online materials with TPR class seem to be a killer. I've done well until I started working with the online stuff. Anyone else in the same boat or can comment on this?
The online materials with TPR class seem to be a killer. I've done well until I started working with the online stuff. Anyone else in the same boat or can comment on this?
Do you mean the Student CBT MCAT Study tools? The MCAT practice passages? or te FLs? (I am currently doing them too)
The online materials with TPR class seem to be a killer. I've done well until I started working with the online stuff. Anyone else in the same boat or can comment on this?
I would say that the older online practice passages are a bit over the top (udnerstatement?) but the newer online practice passages are a lot more reasonable. These are the ones that are listed as "MCAT _______ Review".
I thought the exact same thing when I was in my TPR course. I'd say some of the passages are truly out-of-bounds, and are very MCAT unlike. The verbal passages are good practice, but I think the questions they ask are ridiculous sometimes. Also, the verbal strategy offered by TPR is terrible. Some aspects of it, like forming main idea, deciphering what the question is into laymen's terms, and being able to get a feel for what is going to be asked about the passage while reading it (this part comes with tons of practice), are all beneficial. But, I thought skipping passages to find the KILLER passage, and writing out things about the passage was a TOTAL waste of my time. I was getting 5's and 6's on AAMC's/TPR passages with TPR strategy. The day before I took my exam I said eff TPR strategy, go in order, do my own thing, scored a 9. See Examkrackers for the verbal method because TPR was a detriment to my overall result. But, just know that the upper number AAMC (8, 9, 10, 13, etc...) tests are the most MCAT-like for current tests for verbal and the other sections as well.
The biology book was pretty comprehensive (teacher was an arrogant, know-it-all who really knew little), my physics and ochem teachers were baller, and I could've taught GChem better than my teacher (or so I think, but I'm sitting in the back criticizing, who knows how good of a teacher I would truly be, it just felt that way).
Haha, just keep chucking at it. I don't know which section you're doing online, but I know the physics was dang-near impossible for me. I would also always do badly on the verbal online, it just takes practice. Just know that it is possible to do well with the materials given to you. (My friend and I in the TPR course both scored mid 30's).Man TPR online passages are killing me!
I don't get it I did fine with the hyperlearning text, and EK. Do you guys think maybe its because TPR is online? That it might just take some getting used to?
Haha, just keep chucking at it. I don't know which section you're doing online, but I know the physics was dang-near impossible for me. I would also always do badly on the verbal online, it just takes practice. Just know that it is possible to do well with the materials given to you. (My friend and I in the TPR course both scored mid 30's).
What exactly do you guys consider "struggling" with the practice passages?
1 wrong on each? 2? 5? All of them?
Just trying to gauge there difficulty.
While I don't find them impossible, I am ALL over the place score-wise on the stand alone passages, usually around 70-100%, but sometimes 20 - 40!
Usually around 2-3 wrong out of a 7 question passages. There have been some good passages where I get them all right, or just one wrong, but there's been those that I only get one right as well
Been studying for a while now
The real question is whether they are realistic. Even if they are killer, as long as they are realistic it doesn't matter how hard they are. From what I've read around here, it seems like the MCAT has a bunch of experiments and crazy passages, but the questions are doable if you have your basics down. Is that the case with the PR material people are complaining about in this thread?