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- Pre-Medical


I am stupid at my school and not enough time to make up for it in the day. Guess I'm screwed.be smarter, work harder, or both.
I am stupid at my school and not enough time to make up for it in the day. Guess I'm screwed.

I'm in biochemistry right now--my impressions of it (as I'm studying for a final coming up very, very soon) is that much of the material overlaps, so it may be useful to make connections with material that you have been seeing throughout the course. That way, even with the large amount of material that you have to learn, you will find that things will make sense as you learn to integrate things together.
Also, do problems--as many as you can get your hands on. I can't remember who said this on SDN, but I remember reading in a forum post that exam questions tend to be converted from one form or another rather than created or destroyed (sorry to whomever said this--but thank you!). There will be things that you'll find are guaranteed to show up on an exam in some way, and doing problems/going over old exams will give you some idea of what might be tested.
To answer your question, OP--yes, it does come down to studying, as it takes a while to memorize, process things, and make connections. But it will help give you an edge, if anything.
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I just need to learn how to step away from my dreams and find something I want to do in life ASAP because no way in hell my B- average is improving.Not pre-med material then. Not the stupidity part. The second part. Look up what they teach in a first year in medical school. You better make take brah. Either you're trolling, or you're a pessimistic bum.
This is such a cop out answer. If people can achieve A's at your school, so can you. Put in more work. Keep on putting in work. Put in work until you can't anymore. You can ALWAYS work harder.I am stupid at my school and not enough time to make up for it in the day. Guess I'm screwed.
This is such a cop out answer. If people can achieve A's at your school, so can you. Put in more work. Keep on putting in work. Put in work until you can't anymore. You can ALWAYS work harder.
Nothing compares to having the top 1% of scores in your OCHEM or Genetics/ Biochem class in terms of self satisfaction. Maybe bustin a nut gets pretty close, buts thats about it.
I remember when the ochem test avg for test 3 was a 54% and I scored a 248/250 on it. When to the gym and blasted out some heavy dead's and felt amazing. How can you not want that feeling all the time? It's like my coach once told me, why be nervous for a game? The game is where you show your efforts, if your nervous for the game it means you didn't put in the effort before hand.
I apply what my coach told me in terms of football to my premed classes and I kill them. I always have to learn quick on how to score in top % of each class, but I love the competitive feeling. Especially when no ones expects a "meathead" to be in the top % of classes.
Hell yeah man, and I was doing this ontop of working 20-25hours a week. I would laugh inside when I heard premeds bitch and moan about how hard life was and chit. Whenever I felt like I was burning out, I'd just refer to this quote and it would set me straight:I agree 100%.
source: Rank 2/500 students in quarter 2 and 3 of o-chem and like 1/500 in the first quarter. Hell, at the time it probably felt better than sex because I obviously wasn't getting any the time lmao. I worked w/ like 8 other students and we were the top 8. I didn't compete with anyone, I just pushed myself the hardest I could to do better than I usually would.
Yeah ANKI is great for that as well.Studying all along (not just the night before) can help with the difficult classes. One of my high school teachers told us that if we put in 10 minutes of studying a day for a class, we'd be doing very well in it and wouldn't need to cram before exams. Ten minutes was a little short for some of the college classes (and med school classes!), so I tried to do 20-30 minutes a night per class in college (less for easy classes, a bit more for tough classes). I usually was near the top of my classes, and, what's even better, I remember the stuff I studied from those classes nearly a decade after taking them 🙂
Maybe if I took one class a semester. 🙂This is such a cop out answer. If people can achieve A's at your school, so can you. Put in more work. Keep on putting in work. Put in work until you can't anymore. You can ALWAYS work harder.
I need to put 2 hours a night per class and I'm annoyed and angry at that. I think if I went to school somewhere else, my confidence would be higher and I'd preform better.Studying all along (not just the night before) can help with the difficult classes. One of my high school teachers told us that if we put in 10 minutes of studying a day for a class, we'd be doing very well in it and wouldn't need to cram before exams. Ten minutes was a little short for some of the college classes (and med school classes!), so I tried to do 20-30 minutes a night per class in college (less for easy classes, a bit more for tough classes). I usually was near the top of my classes, and, what's even better, I remember the stuff I studied from those classes nearly a decade after taking them 🙂
If you take this attitude towards it, you aren't going to progress very far. Medical school will hit you like a sack of bricks.Maybe if I took one class a semester. 🙂
I just got a 1/2 the average grade on my Biochem quiz. Do you seriously not think the intelligence of the pool of students matters? Don't get me wrong, I could probably work day and night and get average, but that's average, that's a B-.If you take this attitude towards it, you aren't going to progress very far. Medical school will hit you like a sack of bricks.
No, I do not. Everyone has the capacity to succeed at whatever it is they set their heart to. Chalking it up to the actions of others inhibiting you from success is rather pathetic.I just got a 1/2 the average grade on my Biochem quiz. Do you seriously not think the intelligence of the pool of students matters? Don't get me wrong, I could probably work day and night and get average, but that's average, that's a B-.