what are people's experiences with it? mine is in october. it's just a gauge of what we need to work on right? did anyone study for it?
Disagree. The ITE exam is the direct correlation that your PD will use to gauge where you are in respect to your intern class and for you to gauge where you are in the nation. Going into it cold to me is the equivalent of going into the USMLE cold...just not smart. I didn't study last year on the recommendation of some seniors and attendings. While I had a reasonable showing because I did not perform where I could have if I had studied I have 1) to wait another year to moonlight so I can meet the previously unknown score desire of my PD and 2) I have a perception that I am being watched which adds more pressure on an exam that is already ridiculously boring and excessively long compared to the actual IM boards.gauge...dont study
Disagree. The ITE exam is the direct correlation that your PD will use to gauge where you are in respect to your intern class and for you to gauge where you are in the nation. Going into it cold to me is the equivalent of going into the USMLE cold...just not smart. I didn't study last year on the recommendation of some seniors and attendings. While I had a reasonable showing because I did not perform where I could have if I had studied I have 1) to wait another year to moonlight so I can meet the previously unknown score desire of my PD and 2) I have a perception that I am being watched which adds more pressure on an exam that is already ridiculously boring and excessively long compared to the actual IM boards.
If you are trying for Cards, GI, or (insert specialty) one of the most important criteria your PD will use in crafting you LOR is your performance relative to your co-residents. Same deal for word of mouth recs to potential research mentors or for that future hospitalist position you want. They can not give the exact number but just like med school they have code phrases (ie. exceptionally knowledgeable compared to peers vs solid medical knowledge etc) that are cryptic to us but are PD speak.
My recommendation is that after you take a month to learn the lay of the land and get adjusted to your residency system that you pull out a MKSAP and read the corresponding subject. Its hard because you will be tired at night but its a good habit to get into reading 20 min a night and titrate up as able.
Do not fall into the don't study trap. My guess is more people study than not as interns though I have no data to support this. Use the new USMLE World IM Q bank or digital/book MKSAP questions to gauge where you are. You did not get to where you are by not studying for exams that they make entire book series and expensive review courses about.
My 2 cents.
No I could moonlight my 2nd year after passing Step 3 and getting a license. My PD actually is not ridiculous about it at all. My med school IM residency PD was known for being a way more uptight about it than my current PD. There is no significant heat or feeling like my job is in jeopardy or I can't get the fellowship I want. Its just I have regrets I did not put in work and score higher since I could have been moonlighting by October of this year instead of now waiting until the spring when I will be busier. Just my personal desire for cash thats all. However, other programs may be different.You had a PD that would let you moonlight first year? And you had a PD that used the test as something it's not intended for? Would you please send me a PM and let me know which program this is, so that I can recommend people not go to it?
To the OP, the test is designed to be taken in your SECOND year, and to be taken COLD - no studying - a 30%ile in your second year roughly corresponds to just passing boards, and 60%ile essentially mean you will pass boards. THAT'S IT.
I mean ask around . . . If your PD is the kind of asshat that uses these scores against you, then do some studying. If they don't use it against you, then **** the studying. I didn't study. Not once. I wanted to see what I knew and how well I was learning things in my program just being a resident. I was pleasantly surprised by my great, but not astronomical scores. I also passed boards without issue, so the numbers were correct, at least in my case.
You had a PD that would let you moonlight first year? And you had a PD that used the test as something it's not intended for? Would you please send me a PM and let me know which program this is, so that I can recommend people not go to it?
To the OP, the test is designed to be taken in your SECOND year, and to be taken COLD - no studying - a 30%ile in your second year roughly corresponds to just passing boards, and 60%ile essentially mean you will pass boards. THAT'S IT.
I mean ask around . . . If your PD is the kind of asshat that uses these scores against you, then do some studying. If they don't use it against you, then **** the studying. I didn't study. Not once. I wanted to see what I knew and how well I was learning things in my program just being a resident. I was pleasantly surprised by my great, but not astronomical scores. I also passed boards without issue, so the numbers were correct, at least in my case.
So what exactly is the point of having these in the first couple months of internship? I think most of what I will have learned by that point in training will mostly involve not $hitting myself when my pager goes off and maybe how to order an effing TTE on our ******ed E-ordering system!...I think some of my first couple weeks of frustration may be coming out in this reply
...I was pleasantly surprised by my great, but not astronomical scores. I also passed boards without issue, so the numbers were correct, at least in my case.
Just out of curiosity, what ITE percentile or percentage correct is considered good, great, or astronomical?
So what exactly is the point of having these in the first couple months of internship?
thanks guys for the advice.
I may consider studying. although I'm getting kind of hammered with 6 weeks of wards now with a 2 week 'break' with neuro then 2 more weeks of wards. then its october and the exam is that month and I have nightfloat the first 2 weeks of it.
not sure if this was a coincedence or not, but the guy who killed the ITE during his intern year (he's a 2nd year now) got intern of the year at my program. I suppose it doesn't mean much, but I'm sure it helped him in the long run.
I'll consider studying; but as one person said, I do get worn out at the end of days, and that's even now with just doing h+p's; I start doing discharge summaries soon. yay...
love it though. I"m glad I get to be where I want to be.
not sure if this was a coincedence or not, but the guy who killed the ITE during his intern year (he's a 2nd year now) got intern of the year at my program. I suppose it doesn't mean much, but I'm sure it helped him in the long run.
Sure, but that's probably largely because they start studying like fiends after they get their scores back. That doesn't mean the exam is worthless, it means that it's fulfilling one of its intended purposes. Probably if you bomb the ITE and then change nothing, then you fail the boards, but there just aren't enough completely self-destructive IM residents to test this theory.Almost everyone who gets slammed on the ITE and does awful goes on to pass the ABIM boards without problem on their very first try if that tells you anything of the value of the ITE.
Now would be a good time to learn the difference between causation and correlation.
I do plan on doing a little studying. I don't want to go into it cold.
Why study? Unlike the ABSITE, the ABIM ITE is meant to gauge improvement...and many programs don't have interns take it at al.
Bomb it this year, blow it out of the water next near, wait for somebody in power to ask if you want to be a chief resident then laugh loudly in their face...preferably at noon conference or Grand Rounds.
Why bomb it at all? I don't understand the objection to some review before taking the exam. You have brand new interns who spent 4th year chilling and not doing any substantial work taking the exam. I'd argue it's not even their true baseline.Why study? Unlike the ABSITE, the ABIM ITE is meant to gauge improvement...and many programs don't have interns take it at al.
Bomb it this year, blow it out of the water next near, wait for somebody in power to ask if you want to be a chief resident then laugh loudly in their face...preferably at noon conference or Grand Rounds.
I think this issue is very subjective and varies from program to program. When I saw this thread I freaked out and went to talk to my program cordinator. She told me that...it doesnt matter because it is supposed to gauge how much we learn. Just when I was about to exit her office she called me and said...off the record....if I bomb it, I am gonna draw extra attention from the program director and I shd avoid that. Btw I am an intern.
I think this issue is very subjective and varies from program to program. When I saw this thread I freaked out and went to talk to my program cordinator. She told me that...it doesnt matter because it is supposed to gauge how much we learn. Just when I was about to exit her office she called me and said...off the record....if I bomb it, I am gonna draw extra attention from the program director and I shd avoid that. Btw I am an intern.
well I just took it the other day. it was rough. tons of things I've never even heard of like oncology and other stuff. oh well, at leats I have 3 years to prepare!
Disagree. Felt the ITE was a fairly good representation of abim. The abim was probably one of the fairest written exams I've encountered.
so I got my score back. 47th percentile. I am told that is pretty good for PGY-1? I've heard the percentile is more helpful in 2nd years. how did you guys have it interpreted?
Main thing would be to see what areas you did better in and what needs improvement. Study a topic in the area you are weak in every week and see how you do next year. You can go online and find out what broad topics you missed and read up on those.
Each years percentile score is computed separately so this means you are slightly below mean for all PGY-1s who took the test.
ah ok that makes sense. not too bad then. I def did poorly on GI and Pulmonary so I'll work on those.
So if you get 76th percentile in PGY-1 what does that mean? Is that considered good? I wish they gave us an average score for our program, or else it's not that helpful if they compare across ALL of North America?
Hmm so it's in my best interest not to do too well in PGY-1? Lol. Oh well, will see what happens next year. Isn't there an absolute % correct too? Like by 60% correct, you're referring to that score right, not the percentile in PGY-3.
Percentile Rank by PGY level is more important than Total Percent correct score?
bump! taking my ITE in October... any suggestions for prep and or not prepping?
Never study on your first year specifically for the ITE. After that, study or don't study it's up to you. But your scores are bound to come up. Worst thing you can do is study on your first year, do excellent on it, then drop down drastically in percentile the next year because you were in hard rotations and couldn't study for it. Personally, I never studied for them.. I think it's a waste of time. Just study whatever patients you have and try to be a good doctor.
Just my opinion. Other people may have different thoughts. Also, I've always been a good test-taker so I never really worried about it.
Never study on your first year specifically for the ITE. After that, study or don't study it's up to you. But your scores are bound to come up. Worst thing you can do is study on your first year, do excellent on it, then drop down drastically in percentile the next year because you were in hard rotations and couldn't study for it. Personally, I never studied for them.. I think it's a waste of time. Just study whatever patients you have and try to be a good doctor.
Just my opinion. Other people may have different thoughts. Also, I've always been a good test-taker so I never really worried about it.
So... study... maybe. I have this thing next month and I am sure I would've been more prepared for this... say a year ago after step 2
If you're an intern, don't bother. Tank it (not on purpose of course). That way you'll look better the next 2 years.