Help, Kaplan vs Princeton Review

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

csheng89

Full Member
10+ Year Member
Joined
Aug 26, 2009
Messages
95
Reaction score
0
Hi,

I'm thinking about taking a MCAT prep course. Which one do you guys think is better and why?

I saw the Princeton review hyperlearning book set and they were thick... not sure if it's too much detail for the MCAT or not.

Also, it seems that Kaplan is the more popular choice by most.

So any opinion would be great. thanks
 
First off, teacher quality differs too much area to area to make a comment on that.

TPR:

Pro:
- Better books in all areas
- Offers a decent amount of practice material

Con:
- Practice tests aren't great

Overall:
TPR Hyperlearning is the safe bet. At worst, you have access to some great books.



Kaplan:

Pro:
- Tons of online practice material
- Some good FLs (#1-6)

Con:
- By far the worst books out of the major companies

Overall: If you know you'll get a great teacher, go for it. Otherwise, I'd avoid. In either case, you'd need to buy new content review books.
 
First off, teacher quality differs too much area to area to make a comment on that.

TPR:

Pro:
- Better books in all areas
- Offers a decent amount of practice material

Con:
- Practice tests aren't great

Overall:
TPR Hyperlearning is the safe bet. At worst, you have access to some great books.



Kaplan:

Pro:
- Tons of online practice material
- Some good FLs (#1-6)

Con:
- By far the worst books out of the major companies

Overall: If you know you'll get a great teacher, go for it. Otherwise, I'd avoid. In either case, you'd need to buy new content review books.

Arent the Princeton Review practice tests better than the Kaplan ones though? I thought PR used old real MCAT tests whereas Kaplan makes up its own.

Also, whats FLs stand for?
thanks
 
Arent the Princeton Review practice tests better than the Kaplan ones though? I thought PR used old real MCAT tests whereas Kaplan makes up its own.

Also, whats FLs stand for?
thanks

For now, Kaplan has better FLs (which stands for full lengths in reference to full length practice tests). TPR Hyperlearning and Kaplan do not use old MCATs in their FLs. However, both companies give you full access to all of the AAMC practice tests.
 
I think it depends on how much you already know. If you need a refresher and just recently finished your prereqs, than Kaplan would be fine (or EK in that case). But if you kind of need to re-learn things, TPR is much better. It does go into a lot of detail, but I would rather read an extra page to understand the concepts than to read a couple sentences for memorization. I can only speak for the books, since I have not, and don't plan on, taking their courses.
 
I thought the verbal section on kaplan's fl exams are terrible? Since most people's weaknesses are in verbal I would think that's somewhat of a problem...
 
Hi,

I'm thinking about taking a MCAT prep course. Which one do you guys think is better and why?

I saw the Princeton review hyperlearning book set and they were thick... not sure if it's too much detail for the MCAT or not.

Also, it seems that Kaplan is the more popular choice by most.

So any opinion would be great. thanks

The question of one course versus another gets bantered around this place quite frequently. And the replies pretty much read the same, with one third acting as cheerleaders for Course A, one third acting as cheerleaders for Course B, and the last third talking about you and your needs. In the end, the thread doesn't help as much as you'd think, because there never is a clear and obvious choice. So what I would strongly suggest is the following:

First evaluate your strengths and weaknesses

  • (1) Rank your intuition and knowledge base in biology, physics, verbal, general chemistry, and orgo.

    (2) Assess how well you can study on your own versus how much you need support. Even if you take a course, 80%-90% of the time you put in to preparing will be on your own.

    (3) What type of learner are you; do prefer reading or lectures?

    (4) How good of a test taker are you; do you have good instincts when it comes to answering multiple choice questions?

Add more question you feel are pertinent, and once you have that list, ask people more specifically whether Course A or Course B was strong in the areas where you have needs.

Second, find out about each course in YOUR area. Teacher quality and material availability vary drastically between sites. While Course A may have a magnificient verbal teacher in Baltimore, they have a terrible one in Des Moines. While Course B may have an amazing physics teacher in Dallas, they have the worse physics teacher ever in San Diego.

The number one thing when considering a live MCAT course is whether the teachers style will help you to get a better score and whether they will be available to field the questions you'll have over the course of the program. One knock on the large programs in major metropolitan areas is that there are so many students, that you get lost in the crowd and can't easily get help. Ask friends who have taken the classes at the location where you'll be taking the class.

I personally think classes are great for about 60 to 70% of people taking the MCAT and a waste of time for the rest. You need to know which one you are. Materials, both on line and on paper, can be found everywhere from eBay to Craigslist, so when you are considering a classroom course, consider just the aspects that are specific to the class: instructor quality, office hours, and ability to get questions answered.

Unfortunately, getting an answer specific to your location is not that easy on SDN. This place is great for so many general premed questions, but when the questions become regional, you might need to augment the answers here with other sources.

Good luck!
 
The question of one course versus another gets bantered around this place quite frequently. And the replies pretty much read the same, with one third acting as cheerleaders for Course A, one third acting as cheerleaders for Course B, and the last third talking about you and your needs. In the end, the thread doesn't help as much as you'd think, because there never is a clear and obvious choice. So what I would strongly suggest is the following:

First evaluate your strengths and weaknesses

  • (1) Rank your intuition and knowledge base in biology, physics, verbal, general chemistry, and orgo.

    (2) Assess how well you can study on your own versus how much you need support. Even if you take a course, 80%-90% of the time you put in to preparing will be on your own.

    (3) What type of learner are you; do prefer reading or lectures?

    (4) How good of a test taker are you; do you have good instincts when it comes to answering multiple choice questions?

Add more question you feel are pertinent, and once you have that list, ask people more specifically whether Course A or Course B was strong in the areas where you have needs.

Second, find out about each course in YOUR area. Teacher quality and material availability vary drastically between sites. While Course A may have a magnificient verbal teacher in Baltimore, they have a terrible one in Des Moines. While Course B may have an amazing physics teacher in Dallas, they have the worse physics teacher ever in San Diego.

The number one thing when considering a live MCAT course is whether the teachers style will help you to get a better score and whether they will be available to field the questions you'll have over the course of the program. One knock on the large programs in major metropolitan areas is that there are so many students, that you get lost in the crowd and can't easily get help. Ask friends who have taken the classes at the location where you'll be taking the class.

I personally think classes are great for about 60 to 70% of people taking the MCAT and a waste of time for the rest. You need to know which one you are. Materials, both on line and on paper, can be found everywhere from eBay to Craigslist, so when you are considering a classroom course, consider just the aspects that are specific to the class: instructor quality, office hours, and ability to get questions answered.

Unfortunately, getting an answer specific to your location is not that easy on SDN. This place is great for so many general premed questions, but when the questions become regional, you might need to augment the answers here with other sources.

Good luck!

I would take TPR over Kaplan. Teacher quality in prep comps is a myth I would propose, you learn everything on your own no matter what.

BUT I wouldn't take a course. A grab bag of materials will do you better. Sn2 has the good list.

You could buy all the same materials they use and 30 practice exams and still spend about HALF of what they will charge.

This is true. I have all the 2008 TPR stuff, which I got for $100. TBR is good for PS and Ochem. EK bio. Lots of practice exams.

The class is the equivalent of buying a great meal and having someone feed it to you. Studying on your own is like grabbing the silverware without the aide of a servant.
 
I would take TPR over Kaplan. Teacher quality in prep comps is a myth I would propose, you learn everything on your own no matter what.

BUT I wouldn't take a course. A grab bag of materials will do you better. Sn2 has the good list.

You could buy all the same materials they use and 30 practice exams and still spend about HALF of what they will charge.

This is true. I have all the 2008 TPR stuff, which I got for $100. TBR is good for PS and Ochem. EK bio. Lots of practice exams.

The class is the equivalent of buying a great meal and having someone feed it to you. Studying on your own is like grabbing the silverware without the aide of a servant.

Sn2? do you have a link or anything?
 
Sn2? do you have a link or anything?

Biology: 1. EK Bio + EK 1001 Bio, non-detail oriented 1. BR/TPR Hyperlearning, detail oriented 3. Kaplan

Physics
: 1. BR 2. Nova 3. TPR Hyperlearning 4. Kaplan

Verbal: 1. EK Verbal + EK 101 Verbal 2. TPR Hyperlearning 3. BR 4. Kaplan (Avoid if possible)

Organic Chemistry: 1. BR, by far 2. TPR Hyperlearning 3. EK/Kaplan

General Chemistry: 1. BR, by far 2. TPR Hyperlearning 3. EK/Kaplan

Extra Practice Material: 1. TPR Hyperlearning Verbal Workbook + TPR Hyperlearing Science Workbook, good source of practice passages 2. EK 1001 series, helps nail down basics
 
Top