- Joined
- Dec 18, 2005
- Messages
- 3,158
- Reaction score
- 8
Classroom Instruction: B+ My teacher was very good. She had taught it before and new what she was talking about. However, we had this guy teach the Physics classes who really sucked. He would show up 15 minutes, and he didn't know his stuff (he tried to convince us that the little p in the buoyant force equation was pressure). Although I didn't really get much out of the classroom instruction, I fell that it was well designed and useful for someone who likes to be taught the material.
Books: C-. I ended up purchasing the Examkrackers books for Biology and Physics, and I only brushed up on the Chem using their books. The EK books are far superior. All the content is in the Kaplan books, it's just presented in an extremely dry format, and they don't distinguish between material you have to know and extraneous stuff (EK does, which is the books' best feature). Also, the end of chapter problems are useless;they're not in MCAT format (again, EK has MCAT style passages at the end of each chapter). The High Yield Problem Solving guide is the only book I found to be useful.
Online Material: A- The real strength of the course, in my opinion. The topicals and section tests are very helpful, and in real MCAT format. The design of the website was kind of annoying (i.e. there's no search feature, so it's difficult to find a particular test), but overall, I was very impressed with the plethora of material available.
Full-Lengths: B The verbal sections are not representative, the PS is way harder than AAMC, and the BS asks very specific questions. The overall experience of taking proctored full-lengths is very valuable, though. And taking the beastly PS sections raises your score, even though they are very intimidating.
Overall: B/B+. It's no value, but I think at the end of the day I'm happy I took the classroom course. The proctor full-lengths are key for people like me who probably don't have the discipline to take them on my own. If you are that type of person, I would recommend the Online-only version (but still take their full-lenghts!).
Books: C-. I ended up purchasing the Examkrackers books for Biology and Physics, and I only brushed up on the Chem using their books. The EK books are far superior. All the content is in the Kaplan books, it's just presented in an extremely dry format, and they don't distinguish between material you have to know and extraneous stuff (EK does, which is the books' best feature). Also, the end of chapter problems are useless;they're not in MCAT format (again, EK has MCAT style passages at the end of each chapter). The High Yield Problem Solving guide is the only book I found to be useful.
Online Material: A- The real strength of the course, in my opinion. The topicals and section tests are very helpful, and in real MCAT format. The design of the website was kind of annoying (i.e. there's no search feature, so it's difficult to find a particular test), but overall, I was very impressed with the plethora of material available.
Full-Lengths: B The verbal sections are not representative, the PS is way harder than AAMC, and the BS asks very specific questions. The overall experience of taking proctored full-lengths is very valuable, though. And taking the beastly PS sections raises your score, even though they are very intimidating.
Overall: B/B+. It's no value, but I think at the end of the day I'm happy I took the classroom course. The proctor full-lengths are key for people like me who probably don't have the discipline to take them on my own. If you are that type of person, I would recommend the Online-only version (but still take their full-lenghts!).