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How often do/did you have an exam at your medical school?
Every week? Once per month?
I'm referring to 1st and 2nd year, of course.
+1 for meQ 2-3 weeks a large 100-200 question comprehensive (board style) exam.
Q 2-3 weeks a large 100-200 question comprehensive (board style) exam.
How often do/did you have an exam at your medical school?
Every week? Once per month?
I'm referring to 1st and 2nd year, of course.
COMP was every 3 weeks or so (sometimes every 1 or 2 weeks) and anywhere from 50-120ish questions each, depending on the number of lectures covered. Exceptions were towards the end of each semester where we would have a systems exam, Clinical Medicine written, OPP written, OSCE, and OMM practical all in short succession.
systems based ~100-160 written questions every 3-5 weeks with an additional ~50 question anatomy practical.
Mid semester and end of semester OMM written exams ~50 questions
Mid Semester and end of semester Clinical Skills and OMM practicals (easy peasy)
Our school takes OMM very seriously. The written final was the hardest exam we had during first year. Most of the questions were 3rd and 4th order.
Yes. Nova.Some schools have weekly exams!
That sucks.Weekly or weekly plus, by subject......AZCOM
sounds like a blast... our averages were consistently high, with about a days worth of studying you can get upwards of 90%Our school takes OMM very seriously. The written final was the hardest exam we had during first year. Most of the questions were 3rd and 4th order.
What's a 4th order OMM question?
sounds like a blast... our averages were consistently high, with about a days worth of studying you can get upwards of 90%
Asking something like "how would the patient contract against your force if you are treating right anterior innominate rotation using ME?". So, you would first need to know what is the dysfunction. Second, you would need to know the treatment. Then, you need to know the set up for it and how you apply your forces directly toward the position of discomfort. Knowing this, now you can figure out how the patient would apply an equal but opposite force against your forces.