Were these books re-designed in anyway for the new test? If anyone used the self-study books, how well did they prepare you for the new test? I need to self-study over the next 2 semesters and am currently looking for self-study materials. I just took orgo this summer and took physics 4 years ago and chem 5 years ago. I am taking chem again along with bio now, if that gives you any indication of the kind of preparation I am going to need.
Basically, my question is if I should buy the full set of BR books or if I should look elsewhere (Kaplan? PR? EK?).
Thanks.
The bulk of the changes to our course for the new MCAT came in the lectures and the practice exams. We've incorporated in-class computer based questions (projected on screen) and we are in an ongoing development of the CBT exam. We currently have nine CBT exams on our way to seventeen (and eventually more). But the printed aspects of our course have undergone the same updating and modifications that we make with each new priniting (replacing some passages to stay with recent trends).
The reality is that although the new MCAT has a reduced number of questions and a different delivery platform, the science sections are the same test covering the same subjects. There are a few mental math tricks incorporated so that you can cut down on your need to use scratch paper, but very little strategy has changed in that it's still a POE (process of elimination) exam.
There were minor changes made to our science books in terms of changing a few passages (omitting ones on topics that haven't appearded for a years and replacing them with topics that have appeared more recently). The verbal book got the biggest overhaul, because that is the section where strategies for paper versus CBT differ the most. But to be brutally honest, the in-class strategy guides got the biggest revisions and the books are a step behind. The actual MCAT does not currently have word search, but you can bet it will soon. We are in limbo with our book based on the timing of when to incorporate strategies based on word-search.
I can't speak for any of the other companies, and any changes they made to their books, but I would assume we all did the same thing. Cosmetic changes at best. We did make our writing book shinier.
🙂 We thought about making the biology books scratch-n-sniff, but figured there were various smells that probably wouldn't be good. J/K
The bottomline is that they still test the exact same pool of information, so there really was no need to drastically change the topics in the books. Such changes would be done solely to help with promotions and sales.
I hope that helps.