Yeah, I saw that. How do you do that again?I actually annotate everything into FC. If I read something, I cannot retain it. It goes in and then right out. But if you want to annotate into FA, I would recommend getting your copy of FA converted to a PDF if possible. Using the paper form of FA is highly inefficient for annotating because of the lack of a search function.
Hey, my bad--I meant how do you get your FA digitized with links?This weekend it doesn't seem to be working along with the other problems people have been reporting for the past two days. If you go to a card or the bottom of your home screen, you will find a button that says "Add concepts or questions" or "Write your own topic."
You didn't know that it was FA flashcards when you paid for it?Is anyone kind of disappointed in Firecracker? I got it at a discount til May or June or something when they offered it over the summer for a better deal. But 250$ for what is basically FA flashcards seems a little ridiculous. Especially in light of decks like this: https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/3564661858
Which are, of course, free.
You didn't know that it was FA flashcards when you paid for it?
No I did, but I got it for like 120$ and that was before I found those anki decks... unfortunately. Now they're raising the price even higher.
That's true I do trust quality control at firecracker, and I'm still using it ATM. I'm just a little curious if people are willing to pay 400$ for it. Especially considering USMLERX, UWORLD are priced at around 150$-200$/year and have board type questions to practice withAh. For me the convenience is worth the price. I like the interface more than Anki and I trust them more than random Anki decks. Their tech support has also been super responsive and helpful when I've had any issues.
Different strokes I guess.
FA and FC are essentially the same thing. I like the spaced repetition and the granularity of FC.
You shouldn't be skimming FC just as you wouldn't skim FA. And like others have said, I trust the QA at FC more than some random deck off the internet, even if it's highly rated. In the grand scheme of things, a couple hundred bucks isn't going to break you especially when it can translate to millions of dollars in income potential. I bought FC at $99 during the summer, but IMO, it's worth double that.
"Firecracker is just flash cards of FA"
Although FC includes much content in FA, it includes a LOT more also. Just take a peek at the anatomy or Immunology decks on Firecracker and compare that with the content in FA.. I've observed that many topics in FC that are in FA are actually expanded upon. Throw in their flagging / spaced repetition system, and FC is way more than just FA flash cards.
I'm at only 37 topics flagged so far, but as you master the various topics do the recall questions gain any diversity? I feel like I'll read a massive card, nail a few questions on it over and over, but there's material on the card that I'm not being tested on.
then you need to make your own questions for this material.
Is $500 really worth it for 2 years? Jesus...
My peeps that started this with MS2, how far along are you? I'm 26% banked, all stuff that we've covered this semester (GI, renal, cardio, pulm).
Wasn't always that expensive. :/ But honestly, $500 in 2 years is less than 1% of your tuition in all likelihood. For something that in my opinion drastically improves the quality of your education, I think it's worth it.
I started the free trial last night. Not sure if I'm using it efficiently (Just flagged some topics being covered in school right now and answering questions) yet though. Is that all you do? Flag topics, answer and score your cards, then FC retests you on it to stay fresh?
I managed to get like 10% done in the two weeks of summer before classes started up again though.
Hey, is anyone thinking about using Firecracker after Step 1? To do a very light amount and keep fresh on basics? I'm wondering if I should take advantage of this promotion ending the 18th...
and "Name four causes of homocystinuria?"
You're a beast.
the spelling errors in firecracker are driving me crazy. and "Name four causes of homocystinuria?" is not a question. if they're going to charge a bunch of money the least they could do is have a freshman english major run through it and clean it up.
Yeah. I don't really use the Exam Sim at all. Bank all the topics pertinent to what you're studying in class this test period. Then, the most important thing is staying up on your retesting questions, which will eventually avalanche you. But it's where the beauty of the site lies. If you just flag a topic, do the questions, then don't see any of them again for 3 weeks, then you might as well have just read it in First Aid.
If you're busy with classwork and can't afford the retest questions for old stuff (two school tests ago or something), that's fine - prioritize doing the retest questions for the stuff you're being tested on this test period. But if at all possible, stay up on every single retest question that comes your way and rate yourself honestly.
You said in a previous post that you bank 5 cards per day? I think I'm still not really hip to the terminology being thrown around. Is each question considered a "card"? And is "banking" just answering the question and scoring yourself on it? If so, "banking 5 cards per day" doesn't seem like it would take long (>5 minutes) at all...?
When people say they are banking/flagging a topic that means they clicked on one (say staph aureus) and reviewed the information, then clicked the little flag icon at the top. You then answer questions based on the topic and it will continue to ask these questions over time. When you bank a topic it can be anywhere from like 3 to 25 questions.
A card is referring to a question.
Glad to help!
Sorry, I was inconsistent with the terminology. I use "topic" and "card" interchangeably sometimes. Like Drummer said, "banking" something is flagging the topic and adding it to your rotation of repeating questions. It also shows up on the big blue bar on the main page for how many topics you've flagged out of 1100 (the sum of all Step 1 topics). When people say they've banked 10%, they have 110 topics flagged. At about 8 questions or so on average per topic, this person would be rotating through almost 900 questions.
I try to bank 5 topics a day. It takes about an hour to read through the topics thoroughly, add any annotations I want from my readings, and do the ~40ish questions associated (8 Q's x 5 topics) with them. I get massively behind during the week or two before a big test (I've been more than 3 weeks behind on my "5/day"), then catch up after the test.
It also shows up on the big blue bar on the main page for how many topics you've flagged out of 1100 (the sum of all Step 1 topics). When people say they've banked 10%, they have 110 topics flagged. At about 8 questions or so on average per topic, this person would be rotating through almost 900 questions.
When people say they are banking/flagging a topic that means they clicked on one (say staph aureus) and reviewed the information, then clicked the little flag icon at the top. You then answer questions based on the topic and it will continue to ask these questions over time. When you bank a topic it can be anywhere from like 3 to 25 questions.
A card is referring to a question.
Oh geez. I never thought to double check how many topics were just under the Step 1 heading; I stupidly assumed that the overall total under the blue bar was just Step 1 stuff rather than also including Step 2. Turns out I'm nearly 20% banked rather than 11%! This makes me a little bit less worried about what I have left to learn.
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"Name four causes of homocystinuria?"
they changed this! fast, FC.
I'm 3.5% banked, lol. What are you using outside of your course syllabus and FA?
My studying is mostly based on FC and using study guides made by students from past years. My school also has really good online resources for anatomy and histo, so I use those when relevant.
By just keeping up with what we've been doing in class so far I've banked anatomy for the limbs and the back/thorax, most of biostats/epi, probably half of biochem/metabolism/genetics, nearly all molecular and cell bio, most of general pharmacology, and nearly all of cardiac, MSK, and pulmonary physiology. Question load is around 100/day right now. If you were to commit to banking a few extra cards of stuff you've already covered every day you wouldn't have any trouble catching up.
Ah that makes sense, thanks. So you're reading the section in FC and also in Pathoma or whatever other book you're using, then annotating FA?
In all honestly using FC has dropped my grades so it is definitely give and take (keep in mind I started it essentially at the beginning of second year and I am trying to flag around 4 topics a day).
I'm actually annotating into Firecracker, into the little "Notes" section. Yeah, I put stuff in there from Pathoma, and my school has little high-yield tidbits for various subjects that they give for board prep which I put in there too.
Dang man, bummer. I respect your motivation to continue if that's the case. Firecracker has actually really helped my grades out. I do this thing where the max I rate something is a 3/5 if it's going to be on my test. I'll have a super-obnoxious "MATERIAL ON EXAM 3" text in the notes section of that topic to remind me to rate it 3 or less. So I have like 200-300 questions that are on my next test that I'm rotating through really frequently (a 3/5 rating is a week for me, and since I often rate things lower than a 3 I see them every 4 days or so on average). I make sure every day that I do all these questions first, then proceed onto old material if I can make it there. Maybe that would help?
Not worth doing FC unless you're doing everything?
Cool, thanks for the info. I guess the only downside I see to FC right now is it's not possible to do only the cards that are relevant to the upcoming exam.
I actually use Firecracker for this very reason. We have 3 blocks each semester (each about 6 weeks long). I flag all the relevant subjects during the first week of each block, and then make my way through the hundreds of questions, which of course I miss a lot of. I then do FC everyday for the entire block while still keeping up with lectures. I stop FC a few days before the test to concentrate on the minutiae my school will test on, and also practice questions via USMLERx. At the end of block I will simply un-flag everything and start over.
I like FC because I am becoming very familiar with First Aid and doing well on my block exams. However, I don't feel the need to see questions about past blocks all the time. I will quickly review everything during my dedicated study period.