So I took the MCAT twice.
I took the MCAT last year in May and got a 27 (9P, 10V, 8B). I took it again last August and got a 34 (11P, 11V, 12B).
I had taken practice MCATs before the first one and got 30-32 so I don't think I was unprepared for the info. However, I did have to travel for 2 hours to take the exam and stayed in a hotel but didn't get much sleep the night before.
I was asked about it in interviews last year and stumbled over myself trying to answer it. I accept that score is my fault but I am not sure how to explain its lowness given my second score without sounding like I am looking for excuses.
I am in a similar position (9/9/9 last year, 12/9/12 this year). Going from a 27 --> 33 is extremely uncommon based on AMCAS re-take statistics, so your 7 point jump is also extremely uncommon in re-takers.
Personally, I will probably just state that the first score was a surprise to me (it was several points below the average of my practice exams) and say that I honestly cannot explain it. I might add that I was working full time while studying, but I was doing that the second time around as well.... so I don't think that explains it.
In other words,
I think it is perfectly okay to just say that you are not sure what happened, but make it clear that you knew the first score was not representative of your abilities and that is why you wanted to re-take. The other strategy is to say that you
don't feel like you fully prepared, but it doesn't seem like you think you fit into that category (I don't feel like I did either). I studied my tushie off for both tests and didn't necessarily feel much more prepared for the test the second time around. I think that another strategy might be to
make some kind of excuse for your poor performance like "I had to drive far," or "I was having an off day," or "I had test anxiety." Personally, I don't think that this is a very good way to go about it. Unless there is some huge explanatory factor like: "I studied for 3 days for the first one and 3 months for the second," or "my father died the morning of my first MCAT," or "I had
Ebola during the first MCAT," there is no reason to feel like you need to make excuses or explain WHY things happened.
Like others have said, because you re-took with a significant improvement, it will likely be seen as an anomaly. In fact, I think it is more honest to simply say "I do not know how to explain my first MCAT score. All I know is that a 28 is not representative of my capabilities, as evidenced by the improvement in my score to a 34 the second time I took the exam."
Hope this helps!
🙂
Best,
C