How much do you study per week on average?

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How many hours do you dedicate to studying?

  • less than 5 hrs

    Votes: 12 17.1%
  • 5 to 10 hrs

    Votes: 12 17.1%
  • 10 to 15 hrs

    Votes: 11 15.7%
  • 15 to 20 hrs

    Votes: 14 20.0%
  • 20 to 25 hrs

    Votes: 10 14.3%
  • more than 25 hrs

    Votes: 11 15.7%

  • Total voters
    70
  • Poll closed .

blankguy

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Since it varies from people to people I want to see how many hours most people end up dedicating to studying on an average week.
 
Dang, that's pretty well spread out (at least so far)!
 
"Average" weeks aren't all that easy to come by, especially second year in my curriculum. Lab work becomes the all-consuming beast, while our monthly exams are generally considered irritants (= my opinion and no one else's) that require a week of cramming that could be better spent working on our lab projects. Ergo, studying becomes a binge-and-purge thing. We had a monthly this past Monday, for example, and I've probably forgotten more information these past five days than I learned in four years of undergrad. 😉
 
aphistis said:
"Average" weeks aren't all that easy to come by, especially second year in my curriculum. Lab work becomes the all-consuming beast, while our monthly exams are generally considered irritants (= my opinion and no one else's) that require a week of cramming that could be better spent working on our lab projects. Ergo, studying becomes a binge-and-purge thing. We had a monthly this past Monday, for example, and I've probably forgotten more information these past five days than I learned in four years of undergrad. 😉
Wow, so all you guys are "gettin' your monthlies" now, eh? 😉


I can't wait to start (somewhere! please!)...
 
I couldn't resist.


Seriously: best of luck to everyone. Keep the faith (or whatever it is you keep if not a faith 🙂)
 
The results seem so wide spread maybe b/c the amount one needs to devote to studying varies by year. It would have been a good idea to also post your year.
 
# of hrs studied will vary hugely from year to year. Not only are you in class more during the 1st & 2nd year than you are during 3rd & 4th, but by the time you've finished 2 yrs of school plus national boards (with more to come) you just don't have the energy you once had to study for hours/days at a time.

I would say 1st sem of 2nd yr was the worst. There is so much lab work (remov/fixed prosth, operative, pedo, endo) combined with some of the hardest classes (path, pharm and many more). With test and practicals hitting you each week, I honestly couldn't tell you which I'd consider "irritants", lab or didactic work.

It's true just about every traditional school (prob even non-traditional or pbl programs) will be memorization heavy. And in any such system you're bound to forget a great deal. The important thing is that the necessary concepts are repeated in multiple classes year after year. And I do think that at some point it becomes important for you to self educate. For example: if you don't understand how aspirin works or how/why it's important by your 3rd yr you should look it up. Eventually, what's important will stick and for all else you may encounter, buy a good reference book - drug handbook, internal medicine, complete dentures - whatever.
 
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