- Joined
- Sep 22, 2004
- Messages
- 217
- Reaction score
- 7
- Points
- 4,571
- Dentist
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Okay I promised some particulars, and for what its worth, here were my impressions/experiences. Bear in mind that I agree with a previous post that implied that the DAT is a bit of "the luck of the draw." There are so few questions about so much material, if the stars are in alignment, you could have a great day. In other words, study everything so you are sure you have at least a good day! (great help, huh!). I studied for about 2 and a half months, and studied all the time (waiting for takeout at restaurants, during slow times at work, during lunch, during times when all my friends were doing fun stuff). Heck, even if you're watching TV, you could practice PA stuff. The point is, put the time in, and it will pay off for you. That's what you'll have to do in dental school, right? After studying for a month, I knew I didn't want to have to take it again, so if you aren't ready, postpone it (its really a great luxury to have-I postponed mine twice).
Scores: AA 21 PA 17.
PA 17. I agree with previous posts. The keyholes are a little more difficult, angles a little more difficult. My paper folding was about the same. Just practice so you get used how to visualize everything. I didn't study this section as much and it showed. Also, take a minute and clear your head after the science sections. My mind was fried after taking them (why don't they put the PA after the break, with the QR?).
Bio 20. The questions were generally much harder than anything I had taken on TS or Kaplan BB or AcetheDat. Study everything to cover yourself. I had some taxonomy, H-W speciation, punnet squares, symbiosis, glycolysis, early biological beginnings. I studied more for this section than anything, and don't think I would have done as well had I not studied everything in some depth. Kaplan Blue Book will not cut it! Just use it as a guideline.
Gen Chem 21. Easier than anything I saw on any TS, Kaplan. If you know Kaplan Blue Book, you should do fine. Don't forget all the "little stuff" (pt chracteristics, elemental characteristics). Those "easy" points count as much as equations, etc. I had probably 1/2 equations, 1/2 straight definition/theory. As far as equations, I had solubility, acid-base, dilutions, ideal gas (typical plus density). Know how to identify what's reduced or oxidized, and know those oxidation numbers!
Organic 20. Know all the basics. Kaplan Blue Book should serve you well. I thought this was the easiest section. Nothing tricky. I only had one nomenclature, and it was easy. Know SN1, SN2, Eliminations, all the basic reactions, stereo stuff. I had one on amino acid charge.
RC 24. I skimmed the first lines of all of the paragraphs and then started answering questions. I got lucky because one of the passages was something I had studied in Microbiology class, and I read a lot, so I didn't have much trouble here. I had bacterial resistance, disease, and enzyme passages. Take that break and relax so you can concentrate during this section.
QR 19. Why do they cut it so close on this section? All the other sections, I had time left over. I'm good at math, but I always run out of time here. If you don't know how to solve/set up a problem, pick an answer, mark it, skip it, move on. Don't get bogged down. Know the sin/cos chart. I had three questions that dealt with this, and if you already have the chart written on scratch paper, you can fly through these. I only had one probability, two perm/combinations. Also, smart estimating will save you crucial time on this section. In general, easier than any of the pre-tests I took, but do as many as you can so you can identify each problem quickly.
Kaplan BB test (week prior): PA 20, BIO 17, GC 15, OC 16, RC 20, QR 16
TS (day before): PA 18, BIO 18, GC 16, OC 16, RC 21, QR 18
Good Luck to All
👍
Scores: AA 21 PA 17.
PA 17. I agree with previous posts. The keyholes are a little more difficult, angles a little more difficult. My paper folding was about the same. Just practice so you get used how to visualize everything. I didn't study this section as much and it showed. Also, take a minute and clear your head after the science sections. My mind was fried after taking them (why don't they put the PA after the break, with the QR?).
Bio 20. The questions were generally much harder than anything I had taken on TS or Kaplan BB or AcetheDat. Study everything to cover yourself. I had some taxonomy, H-W speciation, punnet squares, symbiosis, glycolysis, early biological beginnings. I studied more for this section than anything, and don't think I would have done as well had I not studied everything in some depth. Kaplan Blue Book will not cut it! Just use it as a guideline.
Gen Chem 21. Easier than anything I saw on any TS, Kaplan. If you know Kaplan Blue Book, you should do fine. Don't forget all the "little stuff" (pt chracteristics, elemental characteristics). Those "easy" points count as much as equations, etc. I had probably 1/2 equations, 1/2 straight definition/theory. As far as equations, I had solubility, acid-base, dilutions, ideal gas (typical plus density). Know how to identify what's reduced or oxidized, and know those oxidation numbers!
Organic 20. Know all the basics. Kaplan Blue Book should serve you well. I thought this was the easiest section. Nothing tricky. I only had one nomenclature, and it was easy. Know SN1, SN2, Eliminations, all the basic reactions, stereo stuff. I had one on amino acid charge.
RC 24. I skimmed the first lines of all of the paragraphs and then started answering questions. I got lucky because one of the passages was something I had studied in Microbiology class, and I read a lot, so I didn't have much trouble here. I had bacterial resistance, disease, and enzyme passages. Take that break and relax so you can concentrate during this section.
QR 19. Why do they cut it so close on this section? All the other sections, I had time left over. I'm good at math, but I always run out of time here. If you don't know how to solve/set up a problem, pick an answer, mark it, skip it, move on. Don't get bogged down. Know the sin/cos chart. I had three questions that dealt with this, and if you already have the chart written on scratch paper, you can fly through these. I only had one probability, two perm/combinations. Also, smart estimating will save you crucial time on this section. In general, easier than any of the pre-tests I took, but do as many as you can so you can identify each problem quickly.
Kaplan BB test (week prior): PA 20, BIO 17, GC 15, OC 16, RC 20, QR 16
TS (day before): PA 18, BIO 18, GC 16, OC 16, RC 21, QR 18
Good Luck to All
👍