Australian M1 pursuing residency in US-- Advice and when to take Step 1?

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YLG玉龙宫

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Hi y'all, please help me out! I'm seriously thinking of pursuing a residency in the US and so, will be taking the boards. My question is, when should I take Step 1? I know the general advice is to take it after the basic sciences (i.e. June of M2 for US students) but my situation is little unique. If there are any Aussie IMGs doing a residency in the States please hmu!

I'm in a six year BS/MD program (3 year BS, 3 year MD). Currently in my final year of UG and will jump straight into M2 next year, so basically UG is watered down M1 spread across 3 years. Caveat: My school literally did not cover medical biochemistry, genetics & psychology (at least all these things look absolutely foreign in FA). This year (final year undergrad) for example, we jumped straight into systems (i.e, MSK, Renal, Neuro, Head and Neck, GI, Endocrine, Pulm, Cardio). You can then guess how much was crammed into one year. Oh, and I'm in the pioneer batch of this program, so we don't have much structure and organization. It's an absolute nightmare despite saving 2 years off the traditional 8 year path. My freshman and sophomore years were basically doing general college level science units (anatomy, cell biology, a little micro and heme/onc).

High-key freaking out because unlike US schools, we start clinicals in second semester of M2 (i.e. from June to Nov). The first semester will be used to finish up whatever remaining systems we didn't do this year. Our school year also runs from January to November, which is different from the US. I was also given the general advice to do all my boards in a six-month span. Do I therefore take Step 1 at the end of M2 (December 2019) or all at once in M3/M4? I would also need to spend my breaks doing clerkships and research in the US, which are from end Nov-Jan and 3 weeks in July, so the former option is looking more likely.

Any help and advice navigating this Strayan labyrinth will be appreciated.

Cheers fam <3

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Hi y'all, please help me out! I'm seriously thinking of pursuing a residency in the US and so, will be taking the boards. My question is, when should I take Step 1? I know the general advice is to take it after the basic sciences (i.e. June of M2 for US students) but my situation is little unique. If there are any Aussie IMGs doing a residency in the States please hmu!

I'm in a six year BS/MD program (3 year BS, 3 year MD). Currently in my final year of UG and will jump straight into M2 next year, so basically UG is watered down M1 spread across 3 years. Caveat: My school literally did not cover medical biochemistry, genetics & psychology (at least all these things look absolutely foreign in FA). This year (final year undergrad) for example, we jumped straight into systems (i.e, MSK, Renal, Neuro, Head and Neck, GI, Endocrine, Pulm, Cardio). You can then guess how much was crammed into one year. Oh, and I'm in the pioneer batch of this program, so we don't have much structure and organization. It's an absolute nightmare despite saving 2 years off the traditional 8 year path. My freshman and sophomore years were basically doing general college level science units (anatomy, cell biology, a little micro and heme/onc).

High-key freaking out because unlike US schools, we start clinicals in second semester of M2 (i.e. from June to Nov). The first semester will be used to finish up whatever remaining systems we didn't do this year. Our school year also runs from January to November, which is different from the US. I was also given the general advice to do all my boards in a six-month span. Do I therefore take Step 1 at the end of M2 (December 2019) or all at once in M3/M4? I would also need to spend my breaks doing clerkships and research in the US, which are from end Nov-Jan and 3 weeks in July, so the former option is looking more likely.

Any help and advice navigating this Strayan labyrinth will be appreciated.

Cheers fam <3
None of the Aussie schools are thorough with regards to biochem and genetics. So you have to teach yourself.

Go through FA, Kaplan, Pathoma
Uworld or whatever students are using now. Aim to get 70-80% of the Qs correct. Do practice exams then you'll know if you're ready.

It's early to be freaking out, how much review have you even done?
 
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Tried to ignore skimpy and disorganized school lectures and replaced with Pathoma, Sketchy, B&B and rarely Kaplan lecture videos, but I find that the content doesn't overlap very well.

I guess I'll have to mug for those subjects on my own during summer break. I've looked at a few Qbanks such as UWorld and Kaplan, but they seem way too advanced to complete at mid-M1 level, so I decided to hold off purchasing them until after M1 ends and I have finished self-studying biochem, genetics, psyc etc.

I heard the Rx Qbank drills more basic science, should I do that first?

Thanks for your input!
 
Okay, at this stage I'd recommend reading or posting in the actual Step 1 forum, there's far more students studying for Step in there with more up to date info.

Try one Qbank at a go or a QBook. To save money I'd suggest Qbooks. Focus on qs your level. move up to others once you get there.
 
@OP are you perhaps from UWA school leaver/direct entry med program?

Optimal Step schedule to apply to US from Australia imo: Use your break after MS2 as dedicated study time for step 1, write it just before starting MS3. You will always look like a superstar knowledge-wise when you start your rotations the week after Step 1 and are dancing circles around your peers who mostly aren't studying for step exams (the knowledge difference at this stage is really quite staggering and your preceptors absolutely will take notice). Use your break after MS3 as dedicated study time for 2CK and write it before starting MS4. Do your 2CS during the first part of MS4, hopefully while you are in the US for an elective.

Thanks for the tip. Will be in kinda the same situation as OP (except in a traditional 4 year med sch with 2 year pre-clinicals and 2 year clinicals) and thought of a similar schedule for but completely forgot about CK/CS.

Were you an aussie med student that matched to the US? If so, would you be comfortable sharing a bit more of your experience (pm would be cool too)?
 
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