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On the other hand, from GT perspective and as devil's advocate, they thought they were giving the discount to only the original group of 25 people. Not sure if they would have agreed to give the deal to all of SDN.
On the other hand, from GT perspective and as devil's advocate, they thought they were giving the discount to only the original group of 25 people. Not sure if they would have agreed to give the deal to all of SDN.
Guys, do you think GT is worth for 3rd YEAR as well...I'm optimized until the end of 2nd year (2013) so I was wondering if you think it'll be worth, financially and academically, the extra year.
Thanks
Quick question guys...
Is the GT section of Biochem + FA good review for the Step? (In addition to Qbanks, of course)
I was reviewing Biochem and trying to annotate it... but realized there's way more I could add in but FA does a good job getting down pretty much (as far as I see) all that's actually important.
I would not do this. I also do not think that I'd continue giving it out. This code was intended for the original 25 people- not cool to give to everyone as it may limit GT's willingness to give discounts to groups in the future.
The reason I ask is because I was reading Lippincott and glazing over all the stuff I'm pretty sure is not high yield. So was second guessing myself if it was worth the time.
I knew Biochem when I took it well "enough" but my memory is shot. Names ring bells and but things such as regulatory enzymes are just out of my memory.
It is like when I took the MCAT. people would tell me to take practice tests to get the feel but I held off until I went through all the review books. I then went on a test taking spree of 1 a day until my exam to solely focus on understanding and application once I had the base. It worked great. Ain't saying step1 and mcat are the same thing but I think it's how I personally learn best.
I just don't understand why you would be focusing on application before memorizing the core material (this is what GT is for imho). It is like trying to write a novel before learning proper grammar and spelling.
I just don't understand why you would be focusing on application before memorizing the core material (this is what GT is for imho). It is like trying to write a novel before learning proper grammar and spelling.
Or like trying to learn a language before you've mastered the grammar. Oh wait...
(Just playing some devil's advocate with analogies that don't actually fit the situation.)
This will probably be my last post as I'm not trying to start an argument with current users. I realize you guys are set and will be using the program and you should make the best of it. Everyone does things different, like you said.
I honestly don't know what you just said, but all I am trying to say is:
How can I answer the the QBanks when I don't even know what they are talking about or asking? GT for me is about building your foundation of knowledge so that you will be in a good position to hit the QBanks come dedicated study time.
The premise is too simple. It isn't a choice between memorizing facts before qbanks or vice versa. Doing questions in a qbank does not fall under pure application. There is a claim that doing qbanks is a form of learning, and one that is enriched by the fact that the information learned appears in a form similar to the way in which it will be tested. This is all to say that you can bank a topic and then do board-style questions that apply that knowledge.
Writing a novel or learning a language before a grasp of grammar and spelling is a false analogy, because it refers to a process of creative production as opposed to critical thinking and application. They aren't apt analogies.
You should keep on posting. No one is arguing, just talking about how we can all do the best and move on in life! It is nice to see alternate viewpoints instead of a bunch of religious fanboys. I honestly don't know if GT is the best as I still have a year until the Step, but I picked up the program due to the great reviews some high scorers gave it. It is nice to hear a counterargument! 👍
I don't understand the distinction between "spaced repetition" and the concept of forcing recall with a preference to weaknesses. Spaced repetition is based on the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve, in which you review topics just as they fall to a forgetting threshold. This specifically timed forced recall maximizes the efficiency of learning by only reviewing facts right before they're forgotten. The subsequent difficulty of recall makes the forgetting curve slope less steeply, which means you don't have to review the fact until much later, when the fact is about to hit the forgetting threshold. When you're forced to remember it for a second time, at optimal difficulty, that forced recall again resets the forgetting curve and decreases its slope yet again. This is what it meant by "spaced repetition." In this way, a fact that you continually forget gets plotted on a steeper forgetting curve, and you're asked to recall it sooner than a fact that you remember well, which has a more gradual forgetting curve.
The concept of spaced repetition creates a forgetting curve for each fact and challenges the user to recall facts at optimal intervals based on the individual curve for that question. Is there a distinction that I'm not seeing in "It's not spaced repetition. It's forcing recalling then allowing you to review your weaknesses"?
Your first example begs the question. If two people already have mastery of the material, as you've discussed, the facts relevant to that materials already have very shallow forgetting curves. This is what explains the ease of recall 12+ months later. There isn't a point to doing recall on facts that don't hit their optimal recall threshold, and if you have mastered the material then that threshold could be 12+ months away.
What's really being discussed here is that GT has a deficit with respect to the spacing algorithm. It has a (theoretical) maximum of one repetition per day, and a minimum of one repetition per 90 days. You are right in saying that some facts need to be reviewed at 1 minute, 5 minutes, 20 minutes, and 1 hour intervals to solidify that initial learning. Anki lets you do that. You're also right in saying that once you've really mastered a fact you don't need to recall every 90 days, which GT forces you to do.
The balance here is that GT has compiled 6000+ spaced facts for you, and the real tradeoff is getting a premade deck with an imperfect algorithm versus using a more advanced algorithm but having to make all the cards yourself (or trusting that community decks will suit your particular needs). Many people, myself included, have opted to pay money and deal with the drawbacks instead of spending our time making our own cards.
Exactly my point. GT does have a the shortest recall at 24 hours later... on top of that, it forces you to do questions alongside with all the other topics. So let's say you have banked 80% and are really weak on 100 questions, you have to cycle through maybe 800 questions over 2 days and you see your weakest questions only twice. By being able to isolate subjects, you could focus 100% on weaknesses for one day (i.e. Anki with 1000 card deck, you rate 200 weak, then you can repeat those 200 - 10 times that day!)... to repeat those 200 questions 10 times with GT, you would need to wait 10 days and do probably 2000 other questions. This is why people get frustrated seeing the same cards over and over (they can only see it once per day and have to see 500 cards alongside their weaknesses).
There are ways to hack this to make weak cards show up more often than once per day, but they aren't easy or pleasant to do.
Both systems require a compromise somewhere. However, GT should be able to implement changes to the algorithm that would more closely mirror what other spaced repetition applications are capable of.
Which is why I dropped it. There were many things I thought GT should have been able to do but wasn't. Like giving me the option to avoid doing those worthless USMLE questions with multiple paragraph questions or answers (WORTHLESS for fact recall). Or the one's with huge paragraphs that end with, "what does CN VIII do?" making you wonder why you had to read the entire vignette in a fact recall program. I found no way to be able to repeat isolated subjects in GT or to only cycle through certain subjects or sub-topics. At this point, I like Anki's ability to be used on an iPad anywhere without an internet connection and the extra figures all my questions have. But with that said, if GT added some of the options to do subtopics only or to opt out of their BS USMLE Uworld style Q's, I would be very happy with it. I can't go back now with all my own cards made, but I hope for you all that they make the program more flexible. And they shouldn't charge $40 a month which is murder.
Good luck guys... I only made this account to mess around with and this will be my final post! BOOM brotato!
Which is why I dropped it. There were many things I thought GT should have been able to do but wasn't. Like giving me the option to avoid doing those worthless USMLE questions with multiple paragraph questions or answers (WORTHLESS for fact recall). Or the one's with huge paragraphs that end with, "what does CN VIII do?" making you wonder why you had to read the entire vignette in a fact recall program. I found no way to be able to repeat isolated subjects in GT or to only cycle through certain subjects or sub-topics. At this point, I like Anki's ability to be used on an iPad anywhere without an internet connection and the extra figures all my questions have. But with that said, if GT added some of the options to do subtopics only or to opt out of their BS USMLE Uworld style Q's, I would be very happy with it. I can't go back now with all my own cards made, but I hope for you all that they make the program more flexible. And they shouldn't charge $40 a month which is murder.
Good luck guys... I only made this account to mess around with and this will be my final post! BOOM brotato!
Why does it take you back to the beginning of the quiz if you click on a picture in the answere while taking said quiz? WTF...........
I agree with this and what Transformers mentioned earlier. I know for me to be successful I have to start now so that the information is almost second nature. This is the most important exam we'll take and I am willing to give everything I have to reach my fullest potential. I am not reaching for plastics, ortho, ophtha, or anything highly competitive. I'm mostly undecided but I know I don't want to look back with regret knowing I could have done more. I have a friend 2 years ahead of me who I consider to be on par with and we both are at a upper tier school. He didn't do too well on Step 1 and he followed the typical study plan: some light reviewing a couple months before M2 ends and then about 6 months for his dedicated study period. After he told me about his score, I decided to start working now and GT is the best approach for me because spaced repetition is making this stuff second nature. I know for me that it will be a challenge trying to recall all M1 material during the dedicated study period without GT. I rather have a good grasp of the knowledge for M1 and M2 heading in to the dedicated study period and focus on UWorld and practice exams.Theres some good stuff on either side of the argument up there.
But, I will say this. It has really given me a kick up the backside for an average to below average student in a midtier school . Seeing how much Ive stuff Ive forgotten from 1st year only after a couple weeks of break is major league scary I am paying good money for this and, as a result, my motivation to complete and bank questions is high. I am putting in way more hours actually actively answering questions and learning than I ever would have without GT(ie, stare passively at the syllabus). Will be interesting to see how this works for students of all caliber as the year progresses
Here's the reason all of these arguments about time are about to be obsolete: when firecracker comes out in a month we'll have the option to set "maximum # of questions per day".
/thread.
I've actually been wondering if that will reduce its effectiveness in the long run? Doesn't putting a cap mean that you will be missing a lot of material that you would have been forced to go over without the cap?
Just a thought...
That's the whole point. YOU get to pick that limit. I plan on setting it to 100 initially. If I can handle more I'll bump it to 150 a day.
Hey guys. Started ms2 today and I'm already slammed with work. I'm so behind in gt it's epic (still at 47/32). My goal was 50/40. I also have 661 review questions I have to complete before midnight (in the next 45 min). Hope u are all havin better luck
On the bright side, our first path lecture was about angel man and p Willie. I didn't pay attention during the 15 min explanation cus I already learned this in gt. 😎
Def don't think I'll be able to do more than 100.
This scares me.