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I'm sure the title evoked a few emotions, but before that emotion consumes you, please read completely and then let your emotions percolate.
I recently did a debriefing with a student who I have had in class twice, separated by eight years. The first time was Summer 2011 following his junior year. He finished college with around a 3.5 sGPA and despite getting a 29 on his MCAT (equivalent to a 507 on the current exam) didn't have any luck getting accepted to medical school. Fast forward to this past summer when he joined our class again. He had been working as a research assistant since graduation and went six years without touching any books. He started taking one extension class per quarter for the past year and went all in studying this past summer. To his credit, he always got to class an hour early to ask questions and always stayed after class to study. But he was just as committed the first time he studied.
In his own assessment, he felt okay going into the exam but the many years of not seeing the material worried him. I honestly was hoping he could pull off a 509. He was expecting around a 505 to 510. He ended up with a 516 which in both of our opinions was beyond what we figured he'd get. We went back and forth on different theories as to how he did well. Maturity and better focus certainly played a role. Working in a lab helped him on the scientific reasoning questions. But all that still doesn't account for how much he improved.
It got me thinking about the trends I've noticed lately with our students. Our course has kept the same number of lecture hours, skills session hours, office hours, and study halls for the past ten years. Although we modify our lectures a little but every session, they have not undergone wholesale changes. We still teach nearly all the same test tricks and strategies as we always have. We still demand a great deal of our students. The scores for our students in theory should have remained essentially the same during that time. But what we've seen is that they stayed relatively constant until 2015 and then they have inched up every year since. I don't think our students are any more or less prepared than any other year. If anything, we have had a higher percentage of students with lower GPAs recently. In recent years, many students with high GPAs opt to self-study. So if anything, we should have seen our scores inch down.
It's hard to admit and in many ways a little deflating, but I think the upward trend has more to do with the curve getting more generous starting in 2015 than what we do for students. I'm talking about a shift in the culture of students who study for the MCAT. People today center their review around videos. Videos have gone from an obscure option for a random topic here and there (five years ago this was the norm) to being the foundation of many people's study plans. Significantly fewer students take live classes than even as recently as four years ago. Most students who use review books try to watch videos in conjunction with them. Admittedly, we are making videos to accompany our review books, because the marketplace demands it.
Khan has become the most popular preparation tool, most likely because AAMC promotes them. I'm always entertained by seeing students I've had in class who first studied on their own for a previous MCAT before joining us. They all seem rather surprised by how important it is to think the way the question wants you to think and that learning the content is better done through application than memorization. Active learning beats passive learning.
So after all of my cerebral meandering, the point I'm hoping to make is that you can get a great MCAT score by focusing on how to think your way through questions, because the majority of your peers are busy memorizing someone else's flashcards, looking at someone else's review notes, watching videos that may or may not be specific to the MCAT, and not doing enough practice. Before you say "okay boomer" or something like that, look at how many people post about feeling ready for the exam and then getting surprised that they weren't as prepared as they thought they were. I will bet that 90% of the time it's people who centered their studies around completing review and watching videos before starting into practice questions. You need to start with questions right away and learn from your mistakes. Doing this will put you ahead of the curve.
Doing well on the MCAT requires hard work no matter what you do. But you can do better if you do 'smart' work. Good luck in your studies and I'd love to hear feedback about this, even if it starts with "okay boomer"!
I recently did a debriefing with a student who I have had in class twice, separated by eight years. The first time was Summer 2011 following his junior year. He finished college with around a 3.5 sGPA and despite getting a 29 on his MCAT (equivalent to a 507 on the current exam) didn't have any luck getting accepted to medical school. Fast forward to this past summer when he joined our class again. He had been working as a research assistant since graduation and went six years without touching any books. He started taking one extension class per quarter for the past year and went all in studying this past summer. To his credit, he always got to class an hour early to ask questions and always stayed after class to study. But he was just as committed the first time he studied.
In his own assessment, he felt okay going into the exam but the many years of not seeing the material worried him. I honestly was hoping he could pull off a 509. He was expecting around a 505 to 510. He ended up with a 516 which in both of our opinions was beyond what we figured he'd get. We went back and forth on different theories as to how he did well. Maturity and better focus certainly played a role. Working in a lab helped him on the scientific reasoning questions. But all that still doesn't account for how much he improved.
It got me thinking about the trends I've noticed lately with our students. Our course has kept the same number of lecture hours, skills session hours, office hours, and study halls for the past ten years. Although we modify our lectures a little but every session, they have not undergone wholesale changes. We still teach nearly all the same test tricks and strategies as we always have. We still demand a great deal of our students. The scores for our students in theory should have remained essentially the same during that time. But what we've seen is that they stayed relatively constant until 2015 and then they have inched up every year since. I don't think our students are any more or less prepared than any other year. If anything, we have had a higher percentage of students with lower GPAs recently. In recent years, many students with high GPAs opt to self-study. So if anything, we should have seen our scores inch down.
It's hard to admit and in many ways a little deflating, but I think the upward trend has more to do with the curve getting more generous starting in 2015 than what we do for students. I'm talking about a shift in the culture of students who study for the MCAT. People today center their review around videos. Videos have gone from an obscure option for a random topic here and there (five years ago this was the norm) to being the foundation of many people's study plans. Significantly fewer students take live classes than even as recently as four years ago. Most students who use review books try to watch videos in conjunction with them. Admittedly, we are making videos to accompany our review books, because the marketplace demands it.
Khan has become the most popular preparation tool, most likely because AAMC promotes them. I'm always entertained by seeing students I've had in class who first studied on their own for a previous MCAT before joining us. They all seem rather surprised by how important it is to think the way the question wants you to think and that learning the content is better done through application than memorization. Active learning beats passive learning.
So after all of my cerebral meandering, the point I'm hoping to make is that you can get a great MCAT score by focusing on how to think your way through questions, because the majority of your peers are busy memorizing someone else's flashcards, looking at someone else's review notes, watching videos that may or may not be specific to the MCAT, and not doing enough practice. Before you say "okay boomer" or something like that, look at how many people post about feeling ready for the exam and then getting surprised that they weren't as prepared as they thought they were. I will bet that 90% of the time it's people who centered their studies around completing review and watching videos before starting into practice questions. You need to start with questions right away and learn from your mistakes. Doing this will put you ahead of the curve.
Doing well on the MCAT requires hard work no matter what you do. But you can do better if you do 'smart' work. Good luck in your studies and I'd love to hear feedback about this, even if it starts with "okay boomer"!