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Is it possible to do well on the mcat (30+) by guessing at all the physics questions your given during the physical science section and only doing the general chemistry stuff?
no you cant guess on physics.
you can guess on ochem. I didn't study for the ochem part and managed an 11 in that section
+1No, of course not.
Physics is 50% of the physical sciences section, and if I remember correctly, you need about 80% correct to get a 10. You would need to get every single chemistry question right, and you would need to be extremely lucky at guessing on the physics questions (getting over half the questions correct rather than the expected 25%). And don't forget that there are questions that combine physics and chemistry as well.
SDN: always good for reminding you that if your MCAT is too low you die.This is your life at stake.
No. Use BR. Physical sciences is the easiest section to master anyway. Scored a 14 with 8-9 weeks practice. Don't be foolish! This is your life at stake.
Had I done them before I was fully prepared, however, I think I would have just freaked out![]()
Anyone assuming 50% physics content in an actual PS section is making a mistake. My PS was probably three-fourths physics (and I had three organic passages on BS; don't plan on guessing on organic either).
To each his own. I used solely BR + AAMC FLs and Self Assessment. Averaged 13.5 on my FLs in PS.I know this is an unpopular opinion on SDN but I actually kind of hated TBR 😛 thought it was overly detailed and obfuscated simple concepts -- especially for physics. I only ended up using TBR for supplementary biology chapters for which I had no prior exposure. I mostly used TPR and EK and thought they were much clearer. I will say, though, that because the passages are on the more complex side, I did find doing a few passages at the end of my studying a few days prior to my actual test date to be helpful. Had I done them before I was fully prepared, however, I think I would have just freaked out![]()
To each his own. I used solely BR + AAMC FLs and Self Assessment. Averaged 13.5 on my FLs in PS.
Edit: oh, and Wikipedia and sdn 🙂
Is it possible to do well on the mcat (30+) by guessing at all the physics questions your given during the physical science section and only doing the general chemistry stuff?
I don't recall seeing a statement from the AAMC to that effect. Got a source?The AAMC says that 50% of the PS section is physics.
Possible but pretty unlikely to do well by guessing on physics questions. If you get a chemistry heavy test and get lucky you can score highly on the ps section, but you don't want to gamble on that, not for the mcat.Nope.
That is indeed correct (as is everything else you wrote lol).Possible but pretty unlikely to do well by guessing on physics questions. If you get a chemistry heavy test and get lucky you can score highly on the ps section, but you don't want to gamble on that, not for the mcat.
There is a variable percentage of physics v chemistry questions, and not all 52 questions are going to count either. I recall reading that there are experimental questions on each test that are not graded.
Possible but pretty unlikely to do well by guessing on physics questions. If you get a chemistry heavy test and get lucky you can score highly on the ps section, but you don't want to gamble on that, not for the mcat.
There is a variable percentage of physics v chemistry questions, and not all 52 questions are going to count either. I recall reading that there are experimental questions on each test that are not graded.
Assuming 5 answers per question, then yes, it's possible to guess correctly, but quite low. The law of avgs says you'll get 20%.
No, there are four. Not sure where he got five. Perhaps it was five when goro took it?My prep books (TBR) only have 4 answers per question. Is it 5 on the real thing?
I don't recall seeing a statement from the AAMC to that effect. Got a source?
If they're talking completely random guessing, yeah sure, 25%. However, if you're comfortable taking tests, you should be able to do far, far better than the probability predicts just by looking at the answer choices and how they overlap or don't overlap.No, of course not.
Physics is 50% of the physical sciences section, and if I remember correctly, you need about 80% correct to get a 10. You would need to get every single chemistry question right, and you would need to be extremely lucky at guessing on the physics questions (getting over half the questions correct rather than the expected 25%). And don't forget that there are questions that combine physics and chemistry as well.