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So are you saying that GT basically just hammers home the facts without promoting enough integration of concepts across organ systems? I certainly agree that Step-I will never have a "list the causes of X," but for many things it is good to have a list readily accessible in your mind to then go through as you approach a question. You have to have the foundation of facts before you can start integrating, and for me that integration will be done with qbanks bringing everything together (hopefully). I'm not planning on utilizing GT as the end all be all of my study approach, I would never use only one resource for something this important. That would be like only using FA or DIT or something. However, past users have credited GT with helping give them the foundation upon which to build integrations across systems with qbanks like Kaplan and UWorld.
So are you saying that GT basically just hammers home the facts without promoting enough integration of concepts across organ systems? I certainly agree that Step-I will never have a "list the causes of X," but for many things it is good to have a list readily accessible in your mind to then go through as you approach a question. You have to have the foundation of facts before you can start integrating, and for me that integration will be done with qbanks bringing everything together (hopefully). I'm not planning on utilizing GT as the end all be all of my study approach, I would never use only one resource for something this important. That would be like only using FA or DIT or something. However, past users have credited GT with helping give them the foundation upon which to build integrations across systems with qbanks like Kaplan and UWorld.
Good points. There is definitely a way to make GT work, I just don't think that there is enough time for it in a AMG schedule. If I was an IMG on the other hand & had months to sit home & do nothing but step 1 studying, GT would be $$$.
As for the past GT users that have gotten extraordinary scores using GT, I would be willing to bet that they would have gotten those scores anyway. I don't think that GT is some magical program that will bump you up from a 230 to a 250. I also don't think that people looking for a step 1 study program should invest in a program that requires such a heavy time commitment, based on the testimony of a few users who were probably very smart/hard working to begin with.
There isn't much more that I can say because the program is still new, and not many people have taken step 1 after having used it. I personally am not going to put all my eggs into the GT basket & hope for a magical outcome.
Good points. There is definitely a way to make GT work, I just don't think that there is enough time for it in a AMG schedule. If I was an IMG on the other hand & had months to sit home & do nothing but step 1 studying, GT would be $$$.
Agreed. I believe JackShephard was saying something similar a couple of weeks ago, which was something to the effect of: if you put in the time required to complete GT with any other program/resources, you'd probably do really good too. At the end of the day, there is no magic bullet for this beast, we all just have to put in the work. Different things work different for different people. I like GT because I know repetition is key for me. Other people I know are doing a DIT program, because watching videos of some guy reading FA to them works for them.
God, I wish I was a FMG sometimes when it comes to studying for step-I early. I can't tell you how often school gets in the way of my studying...🙄
Agreed. School is the #1 thing that gets in the way of Step1 prep. Group sessions, PBL, mandatory attendance stuff, clinical stuff, etc. I envy the "one dimensional" education of old, where you just studied the science, then moved to the clinics M3,M4.
There are many paths to success. Some will use GT and others won't. All that matters is that you arrive.
DIT seems like a huge waste of money, btw.
Interesting. One of the major advantages for me about GT is that because the questions are relatively fast to do, I can do them during required classes. Thus in a way it allows me to circumvent the required-on-campus time of an AMG school. (Though having a "gunner" logo on my screen probably isn't earning me friends.) Of course, I'm not a true gunner in that I'm going to a P/F preclinical school though, so I don't have to attend to every lecture detail. Early on (I'm an MS1) I tried to do this by studying Kaplan qbank during class lectures, but found that woefully inefficient as the Kaplan ?s were too cognitively demanding to do with a professor talking over me while I was doing them. With GT, that's not as much of a problem and I'm able to get through 30-60 ?s during an hr lecture and pay some attention to the lecture at hand. (I do not take notes; First Aid and other resources are my "notes.")
I do sympathize with what people are saying here w/r/t the negativity toward GT. I hesitate to comment, because I haven't been using GT that long, and I have been changing how I use it as I go. (Earlier in this thread I was touting using lite mode, which I no longer use.) But I'll add my two cents here, bearing in mind that this might not mean much as, again, I haven't been using it for more than a few months, and I've changed my mind a lot as I've gone along:
Currently, I do not use the memory/spaced learning part of GT. Blasphemy, I know. I reset the program all the time. I do this because, like others, I have found the time requirement of doing daily questions to be too much, and actually ends up getting in the way of my learning over all. I suspect this is because, as others have mentioned, GT does not abide by best practices when it comes to spaced learning. The questions should be less "tricky" then they are, easier, faster to do, higher-yield, and more integrative for it to truly be best to tackle them in a spaced learning manner IMO.
That said, I still find GT to be an immensely useful program. As I said above, I like that I can do it during class. I like the fact that I can use my keyboard to get through it very fast vs point-and-click qbanks. I like that it's current and constantly updated; that if it mentions a treatment or protocol that I know it is UpToDate, so to speak, vs other qbanks. I like that there are so many questions vs. other qbanks, and that it tests me on the details that are usually part of an overarching vignette in other qbanks, ensuring that I know each individual detail about, say, bordetella pertussis, not just the overall picture. Finally, I like GT because, like all the other time-tested things out there, it is another resource, with its own strengths (ease of use, comprehensiveness, testing on details, reliableness/up-to-date-ness of the information) and weaknesses, and it attacks the subject matter that is my preclinical education from another angle, further reinforcing this stuff.
Thus I am happy with GT overall, but I have not found it be the panacea some have claimed, and, frankly, what I initially thought it was. It is, however, one of my favorite and most often used resources, in addition to Pathoma, First Aid, and Kaplan/RX qbanks. (No doubt UWorld will be there too when I get near Step1).
the biggest drawback that I personally see w/ GT is the inability to personalize it and/or the inability to see personal notes as part of the answer during the quizzes. I hate having to go back to the original card to see if I have any notes, to the point where I actually don't use the 'notes' feature at all. As a result, I'm now looking into and considering using Anki. I just noticed that other ppl have already made Anki flashcards based off of First Aid...so all that I have to do is to alter them to my liking, which shouldn't be too bad. This biggest advantage for me in using Anki would be to integrate and add the stuff that I think is high-yield. So, for it me would be basically a flashcard version of First Aid/Pathoma. I can also add images to Anki and so could easily add stuff into it as I think is best. I'm still playing around with Anki to see how it works though.
Interesting. Since I have a 2 year subscription, I may actually just use it along side the specific block I'm on... nice to hear this. We'll see, I'm definitely in a reassessment phase. Thanks.
I thought about doing this too, yet I wonder how efficient that would be. Seems like GT would be better.
The process of making flash cards seems like a HUGE time commitment.
Interesting. Since I have a 2 year subscription, I may actually just use it along side the specific block I'm on... nice to hear this. We'll see, I'm definitely in a reassessment phase. Thanks.
I use anki to make and study notecards every block as my primary study means (I read material once and make notecards as I do, do notecards repeatedly until a weekish out from test time, then add on a reread of the material again to make sure everything syncs back up). It's a great program
I definitely think that GT is a really neat innovation with their spaced repetition learning style. Now you have USMLErx also dishing out flash cards based on FA so I definitely think they should really hone down on a good spaced repetition algorithm. In a way, you're paying them to basically do what Anki does but make it look prettier.
Anyway the big issues for me were not getting notified about new cards, what cards people were commenting on, no "pause" button--I don't want to do 200qs before my class exams, not being able to see your notes while doing the respective question and the increasing verbosity they use for the flash cards. Not to mention, one flash card can have 15-20 questions with too many different topics.
They seem to be a receptive company so let's see how they do with their Step 2 program. I've had to scale back on using GT as well due to time issues and I try not to spend more than an hour on review questions
Maybe I'm missing something (I'm new-ish to GT so I don't believe they've added any cards since I started - still at 1064 or whatever it is), but I have noticed that they'll tell you if they add a new question to a topic you've already covered. I just figured they would do the same for new cards entirely; I assume they could do it much in the same way as new questions.
Secondly, about pausing quizzes, it seems just as easy to hit "end review session." Yes, it will give you your results for the questions that you've already finished, but the remaining ones will be waiting there........ OH WAIT, that's not the type of pause you're talking about, is it? Whoops. Then yeah, I guess your only option would be to just clear your daily questions - otherwise it would mess with their algorithm, right?
^^Your first paragraph's idea sounds great to me. I mean, that's what I do anyway... except I just let the cards pile up and do them the day after the test.
As far as extra info, obscure anatomy details you couldn't possibly have prepared for seems to be an early but common theme from the 2012 step i results thread
Expect it to take a little longer than it does for me on your first go (not that you know how long it takes me!). After a few days of doing it though you get the hang of how you need to make the notecards high quality and compatible with the quick quizzing style without thinking about the process too much. I'd say an average block is ~2-3000 notecards, so around test time, you're doing a LOT of reviews, but I can review ~200-250 / hr if I'm trying to go quickly (I'm terribly slower in GT unfortunately, but working on that). One tip I'd give that I've found works for me is to put 3+ quizzable facts on a card whenever possible, but only quiz on one of them per actual card, so you end up integrating the facts a little better as you go, and making the cards is quicker
I am just starting GT and as I was going through some immuno this morning, I had my FA open next to me (I want to get familar with where everything is in the book so when it comes time for Uworld, I can annotate without spending too much time flipping for the right page). I noticed that, for example, the card on the spleen has a lot more information compared to the info you get in the sinusoids of spleen section in FA (pg 233).
So I wanted to ask the people that have been using GT for some time now, if they annotate extra info from GT into FA?? or because after a few months, the extra info is cemented into your head, you don't feel the need to annotate into FA?
Are a Gunner or NOT? Make up ur mind!! Gunners annotate GT into their cerebral cortices!!
Anyone else want to admit to being a *slacker* who uses GT? At least when it comes to learning the minutiae of my preclinical curriculum, anyway... I find GT, used correctly, can make learning the material *faster* than other ways; thus, there is room for slackers to use, GT too. 🙂 (along with other review resources)
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Are you using the alpha of Anki 2? The multiple cloze deletion option is a time saver while still making the best practice, question formulation possible.
any idea if GT is going to start showing your notes on flashcards when you take the test?
Is GT down this morning?
I keep having a crazy idea, and I want to know what you guys think about this. Right now, my goal with GT is to finish banking everything. Earlier in the year, my goal was to add things a a reasonable pace so I could achieve mastery with each concept and THEN add more stuff that I could get to a mastery level, so this way my daily questions never got crazy. However, with time running short, my new idea is to finish GT as quick as possible, so then I can just focus on my daily questions.
So, what I am thinking of doing is banking everything and rating it as a 4, so I won't see it again for 10 days.
Right now, I have 370 cards left to bank. That means if I can bank 40 new cards a day, I will have about 100% banked in 9 days. However, banking 40 cards a day means inevitably adding a bunch of questions to my daily review in 2-3 days. That means in 2-3 days I have a boatload of daily questions to do, which negatively impacts my ability to bank new cards. That's where my above plan comes in. If I am rating everything as a 4, I will not add any new questions to my immediate daily reviews, thus freeing up time to continue banking at ~40 cards per day (note: I am not talking about just rating all of my current daily questions as a 4, just the questions from the new cards I bank). Then at the end of this crazy banking frenzy, I will be able to just focus on doing daily questions. I figure if I am doing nothing but questions and not worrying about banking new crap, I could probably knock out 600-800 daily questions, thereby allowing me to review everything as needed. Unfortunately, right now, I keep banking stuff quickly and then it piles up in my daily questions, and then I can't dedicate as much time to banking new stuff, which just means completing GT goes further and further into April...
I know this seems like an extreme approach, but I am really wanting to finish up banking cards, so I can just focus on daily review questions on GT and then adding in a Qbank/other review books/sources. However, I am not talking about just willy-nilly banking cards and rating them as a 4, I will still take a deliberate approach to when I bank them (i.e. read the whole card, consult wikipedia with questions about the topic, etc.), so that this would just be like a first pass reading of FA where you just quickly review everything.
Anyways, I would never have considered this approach a few months ago, but with the time crunch starting to exert some pressure on me (83 days until I take Step-I!!!!!) I am thinking it may not be so crazy anymore. What do you all think? Should I go for this crazy banking frenzy this next week? I'd be finished with GT by like April 1st if I do...
This doesn't sound crazy. My advice is to never clear a review day between now and the exam. Do it or let it pile up. Don't rearrange deck chairs...
Also, you'll more likely to get different questions the next time around if you rank everything a 4 at first...
From the advice I've read, I think you should definitely try this because you want to be working on those Qbanks ASAP. It will be rough adding 40 a day though, and when all those Q's come home to roost, those won't be fun days.
Don't lose focus of Qbanks (UWorld).
Thanks for the feedback guys. I'd still love to hear from more people, but it's good to hear that I am not totally bat-**** crazy over here.
I know it will be crazy when all those questions that I rate as a 4 hit me, but right now I am getting hit with things that I have been banking and then still trying to bank more. It's like trying to dig a hole with one hand and simultaneously filling it. I hope separating the two will make things flow better.
I have been pretty good about banking lately. I did 36 and 30 cards a couple days ago before only getting 10 done yesterday due to school getting in the way of my learning. I know 40 will be hard, but I think I can do it.
Luckily, my school provided this year's MS-II's with a Kaplan and UWorld subscription (it's kind of a long story why, but they did), so as soon as I can get away from spending hours a day banking new cards, I can start to tackle those. At least that's my plan right now...I also have to try to not fail this last block too, cuz that would REALLY suck.
It seems I'm in the minority, but it is not a good idea man.
you are saying you got more than 80 days, dude if you bank 10cards/day you will be done in 37 days, that gives you another 6 weeks for those 2 Qbanks.
Don't go crazy with banking, if you don't manage to bank all of it in 37 days, so what? Not all of it is high yield!
you can add 2-3 cards per day during the first 3 weeks of doing Qbanks.
Also, you should be flying through Kaplan Qbank, as I heard before that GT is a big help in that Qbank.
But you are the best judge of your situation.
It seems I'm in the minority, but it is not a good idea man.
you are saying you got more than 80 days, dude if you bank 10cards/day you will be done in 37 days, that gives you another 6 weeks for those 2 Qbanks.
Don't go crazy with banking, if you don't manage to bank all of it in 37 days, so what? Not all of it is high yield!
you can add 2-3 cards per day during the first 3 weeks of doing Qbanks.
Also, you should be flying through Kaplan Qbank, as I heard before that GT is a big help in that Qbank.
But you are the best judge of your situation.
i second this. you will get slaughtered when the first review comes back around next week. stay the course and do ten cards a day until you are done.
i seriously can't see the point to doing Kaplan if you are really going to commit to GT. why do another qbank just for the sake of getting them all right? i realize it's free but don't let it get in the way of your GT time. I believe the trick to GT is doing it the way they tell you to do it: study the cards, take the quiz, grade yourself fairly and don't fool around with the algorithm.
Thanks for the input guys. I'm still trying to decide what to do. I don't wanna let the stress of trying to finish banking GT stuff throw me off, but at the same time I don't want to let GT eat into my other time. As it is, I have been banking around 20-30 new cards most days, which is what led me to my thought of just rigging the system so I could blow through the banking part and focus more on the daily questions/reviewing (which is where most of my learning comes anyways).
I'm still not sure how I want to approach it though. I keep battling back and forth between the part of me that wants to not "stress" about banking new cards on GT and the part of me that wants to follow the algorithm as is (two things: I'm not really stressing this, hence the quotes; and I figure I am already messing up the algorithm by trying to do the last 1/3 of GT in like a month anyways, so part of me thinks I may as well go all out).
Like I said, I just don't know what I want to do. I may wait until tomorrow to implement or not implement this approach, so I can sleep on it tonight.
Gravitywave, I was kind of confused about your comments about the Kaplan Qbank, do you not think it is really worth it? Or just that focusing on GT is a better idea than busting out Kaplan?
Here's another possibility you could consider (not to add to your decision making, but because I liked how it worked over spring break). Instead of trying to read through 40 cards per day and pretend you got 4s on them all, what about not really reading the cards so long as you have any semblance of a memory of the topic. Then, instead of reading them, just go straight to quiz mode. Take the quiz, but just repeat the 1-2-3s until you get most/all of the answers at least to a 3-4, so they won't all come back at you the next couple of days. The repetition isn't quite as spaced as normal, but for me it was much less tedious than straight up reading the cards, and it forced me to immediately pound in the tidbits I hadn't learned yet (eg lame side effects of drugs from next block).
Or you could just do 20 cards/day and still be done with banking GT cards in early April? 20 seems very manageable to me.
I think you're setting yourself up for a completely unrealistic daily workload and a huge burnout. 600 daily questions seems absurd to me, and what happens when you get half of those 600 daily review questions wrong and the next day you have 900? or 1000? or 1200?
I think you should bank a more rational number of cards and focus on memorization-heavy subjects (i.e. pharmacology, specific tumor subtypes). Remember, people have scored fantastically on this exam using only UW and FA. GT is a tool, not an end in itself.
I've always found that if I add more than 4-5 big cards or 10 little cards a day, the daily workload begins to outpace the rate at which I can assimilate new info into my brain.
For anyone who's done Neuro GT already, and especially those who did it WITH their Neuro module...how'd it compare? When I was doing cardio, it actually covered almost everything I needed to know, and it helped me seriously bump up my module grade (I'm talking like 12 percentage points compared to past modules, plus I didn't ever actually review individual lectures after watching them the first time OR read the book everyone else did. GT really helped me). That said, I'm wondering if that was the nature of Cardio and my professor...she wanted us to REALLY understand the fundamentals well, which GT helped me do, because (with cardio), then you can pretty much reason out / think through many of the situations. I know Neuro will be a bit different....a lot more memorization, to start with. Did you guys think that the Neuro GT cards/quizzes were super helpful during your module, or should I focus much more on the lectures and details and less on GT for neuro?