Just finished UWorld (+ the UWSAs) - my brief thoughts on it

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Phloston

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In contrast to a post I had made on the Scores thread earlier today, where I said I'd wait a few days to write a UWorld review, I decided that I'm currently in one of my "I don't feel like studying right now b/c my brain is going to implode"-mindsets, so I thought I'd just write the quick review now.

------------

Firstly, UWorld took a lot longer than I had anticipated. That being said, everyone approaches it differently. Some do it in tutor-mode alongside MS2 coursework; some do it timed during the final month of prep; some don't even finish it (you'd have to be insane). I went through it at ~50 Qs/day x ~ 6-7 wks in timed-random. I wanted to go faster, but I couldn't. I knew this QBank is the most important resource alongside FA, so I decided to sacrifice a little time for a bit of extra careful reading (and re-reading and annotating).

Cons:

As people have already mentioned before, you can't copy and paste anything, nor can you PrntScr an image. Despite Uworld's scare that people would illegally distribute their product, for the sake of personal-use, it's rather vexing when you actually do want to save an image or tidbit for later. I'm too lazy to use an external camera, so I just made sure to annotate extra well from anything of high value.

In addition (as people have also already mentioned), the UWorld interface subjugates your entire computer screen, and you cannot Wiki nor PubMed anything without closing out the UWorld block. This would mean that for every block I would review, I would need to close and then re-open it probably at least 20 times.

This might not be an issue with everyone, but for me, it seemed as though ~10% of the questions would improperly load such that the answer choices would be widely spaced apart. I would then need to arrow either to the prior or subsequent question, then back to the question I was working on, in order to get the spacing of the answer choices back to normal. It seems like a minor data-loading glitch that they have. I also have a new computer and good internet, and I haven't experienced that problem on the other QBanks, so it's definitely UWorld.

For blocks that have media-questions, there would be a message box that would pop up prior to commencing them that would remind you to make sure you have headphones, etc. Anyway, given what I've written above, considering the UWorld platform requires you to close a block in order to Wiki/PubMed something, that also meant that every time I'd re-enter the block, the same message would pop up, and I'd have to repeatedly click through it in order to resume my work. I know this doesn't sound like a big deal, but none of us need to see the same message box 20 separate times, particularly when the block's already been finished.

Uworld severely lacks in the biostats and behavioral departments. I did the entire QBank on timed, random assessment, and I exhausted all of the behavioral and biostats questions at ~1500 Qs through (there are 2153 total). Not only that, but are you ready for this one? They offer a separate biostats and epidemiology package, that you can pay for in addition to the QBank, that includes additional biostats questions. It's as though they removed a solid one-third of the user-expected biostats questions from the QBank, and then just placed them into an external platform in order to be lucrative. Not only is this inconvenient, but the quality of the package is far below that of the QBank. It consists of ~30-40 questions sub-divided into sets of 3-6. Following each set of questions, there are a couple of paragraphs that summarize the concepts within those questions, but there isn't actually a critical analysis of each individual answer choice within each independent question. I just didn't understand this at all. It's as though some of the UWorld question-writers didn't want to take the time to analyze each question, so they curtailed their effort, and in the end, just charged people more money. Congratulations.

Anatomy is also weak within the QBank. It is not heavy on CT-scans whatsoever. Kaplan was way better for this. To that effect, Kaplan dominates UWorld with regard to anatomy, behavioral science, biostats and physiology. And are you ready for the hard blow? USMLE Rx beats UWorld for biostats. In general, I thought UWorld biostats was just very disappointing.

Some might view this aspect as a pro, but another con is that I believe the explanations were just way too long. Moreover, the definition of circumlocution is UWorld's explanations. On average, they were about 1-1.5 pages in length per question. I know UWorld is a learning platform, but I don't need to read 1.5 pages on PTH and vitamin D at least 30 separate times within the QBank. Cut to the chase already. One thing that I now realize I liked about Kaplan QBank is that their explanations were much more succinct than UWorld's.

The UWSAs are identical to UWorld QBank. Now let me make a point very clear: the UWorld QBank is only 2153 questions (or 2154 given that they just added a question yesterday). This is already fairly truncated relative to the 3000 in USMLE Rx and the 2994 in Kaplan (Kaplan QBank technically is 2200, but they don't charge you extra for their diagnostic test or two full-length exams), so the fact that UWorld charges extra for the biostats package and the UWSAs is a malfeasance quite frankly. They take advantage of us as consumers because they know everyone needs their product. FA, for instance, could charge $100 per new copy of their book, and guaranteed everyone would still buy it, because we all know we need it. The difference is that the FA authors just aren't as avaricious; they're error-prone instead (ahem, 30-page errata, ahem).

The QBank is not invincible. I encountered ~20-30 errors. The worst part about this is that since UWorld is supposed to be the supreme resource, whenever I'd encounter an error, suddenly I'd freak out and think I was wrong and that I didn't know what I was doing. Then I'd have to go on an unnecessary research tangent for 20 minutes. A couple of simple examples that I can think of off the top of my head: I made a post a few days ago (the QID# is in that post), where UWorld had said ventilation is greater at the lung apices, but it actually increases apex --> base (now imagine if your pulmonology physio is weak; that doesn't help anyone out); just yesterday, I read in one of the UWSA explanations that iron poisoning creates a non-anion gap acidosis, but it's anion-gap --> MUDPILES).

Out of the score sub-divisions, histology accounted for only 17 questions in the entire QBank!! Now how does that make any sense? While going through the QBank, I noticed that I had exhausted all of the histology-category questions very early on, and yet I would still encounter ones that would have a vague single-line vignette, followed by an image of cells and a subsequent question that relied on an ability to analyze the picture. How in the world that isn't classified as histology blows me away. There were probably at least 50 (arbitrary number) pure histo questions in the QBank, so I wasn't able to track my progress in that category accurately at all. I think those questions were generally classified as pathology or anatomy, but not appropriately as histo.

There were no four-stethoscope-location heart sound questions, as there had been in Kaplan. Also, the heart sound questions that UWorld did have, it would almost be impossible sometimes to really hear what was going on, let alone the fact that the sound would play for, no joke, about 1.8 seconds, then stop (whereas Kaplan or Rx might play it for 10 seconds).

I might just have severe retrograde amnesia at the moment (it's the middle of the night here in Australia), but I don't recall there having been any video questions in UWorld, apart from maybe 10, at the most. In general, I found there to be a dearth of media questions.


Pros:

The power of UWorld is in its explanations. When everyone says that UWorld is the best QBank and that nothing else compares, there's isn't, nor has there ever been, a prevarication. UWorld elaborates on concepts and fills in gaps that you probably should have had patched a long time ago in MS1. I had done lots and lots of practice questions before having milked UWorld, and I definitely had quite a few shockers sometimes when I'd get questions wrong that >70% must have thought were cake-easy.

As I said above, I felt the explanations in UWorld were a bit long. They could have conveyed the exact same points in about 80% of the text, but nevertheless, the explanations were generally strong. I'd say ~15% were fantastic, 15% very good, 35% good, 25% fair, 10% poor.

If there's anything I can thank the UWSAs for, it's that their explanations are about 2/3 the length of the QBank ones.

It would never be the brevity of a particular explanation that would reduce its quality; sometimes the question-writer just didn't address my thought process, or he or she would be too loquacious over some banality at the expense of even a cursory discussion of an important topic. However, as I've said, ~30% of the explanations were solid.

There are many multi-step questions that require significant integration of knowledge. I wasn't too surprised by many of these because I had already done lots of questions prior to UWorld, but they definitely make sure you know how to apply the material rather than just regurgitate it.

I felt many of the questions were very similar to USMLE Rx's. USMLE Rx definitely got me many points in UWorld- lots of simple tricks that I would have gotten wrong months ago but was now vigilant for.

The integration of cardiovascular pharmacology and physiology is pretty good. If you're a little uncertain as to the absolute specifics regarding where and how the different anti-arrhythmics act/work, rest assured that you'll come out of UWorld knowing that stuff. This is very good because CVS pharmacology is exceedingly high-yield.

Now there's a million reasons why we get questions wrong: ******ed errors, misreading, simply not knowing the info, tricks, etc. I'd say that ~ 1/20 questions or so that I'd get wrong, I'd find myself saying "hm wow. That was a very very good question." The translation of that statement = a question where it would have been nothing that I had encountered through any of the prior practice questions I had ever done, and yet was a very creative way of assessing the knowledge. In other words, UWorld has a few rare questions that are of extremely high value.

There's a comment box. Hurray! If you've done Kaplan QBank and noticed that there's no comment box, at least there's one in UWorld. The only down-side is that they don't pay you like USMLE Rx does to correct their errors (so where's the real incentive? Because you're a good person?).

UWorld has solid biochemistry, microbiology, pathology and neurology.

They give you percent-breakdowns next to every answer choice with regard to how many students chose which (this is in contrast to Kaplan, which just tells you the % answering the question correctly overall). I feel this is important because it teaches you how other people think and/or approach questions. Sometimes you can be proud of yourself for your giftedness. Other times you can realize you're ******ed and need third-grade remediation. It goes both ways.


----------

Anyway, some people have PMed me about wanting me to post about my progress with this QBank and the UWSAs, etc. I list the following scores, not for the sake of self-aggrandizement (by all means, here on SDN, there are probably many genius-lurkers who laugh at how much better they're doing), but just to give people an idea as to the relative difficulties of the question resources:

USMLE Rx (tutor-mode, random; March-April): ~85%

FA Q&A (May): ~94%

Kaplan QBook (May): ~84%

GT QBank (timed, random; June-July-ish): ~85%

NBME3 (end of July): 250

Kaplan QBank (timed, random; August): ~81%

Kaplan full-length tests #1 & 2: ~81%, ~80%

UWorld (timed, random, first-pass; September-mid-October): ~85% = 96th percentile; first half = 84%; final 1000 questions = 86%

Best 3 UWorld subjects: biochemistry, microbiology, pathology

Worst 3 UWorld subjects: behavioral science, biostats, histology

UWSA1 (one week ago; 9-weeks-out from real USMLE) = 264 = ~84% correct

UWSA2 (today; 8-weeks-out) = 262 = ~82% correct

Needless to say, considering the UWSAs are supposed to over-predict by like 20 points, this is the first time I'm "freaking out," especially since everyone seems to get 265+ on them. I managed to get a 12%- and 89%-answering-correctly-question right and wrong, respectively, within the same block today on UWSA2 (and no I'm not just making that up to be entertaining). In general, I felt the UWSAs were very turbulent, and I made quite a few unforgivable errors. I don't need to complain for hours on end here, but if there's anything I've learned, it's that on the real exam day, if I have any extra time at the end of my blocks after already having reviewed the marked questions (usually ~5 minutes / UWorld block), instead of adding it onto my break time, I'll instead use it to go back and do a blitz-review of unmarked questions. The Step1 is once and there's no room for nonsense. I find the error-rate for serious misreadings of unmarked questions is about 1 in 80 or so, which on the real USMLE, is 4 questions that I'd rather have not cause me acute stress disorder during the 3 weeks subsequently. Oh, and a few RedBulls won't hurt either.

I sit the exam December 14th.

I hope that review helps some people.

~Phloston
 
Last edited:
How many more questions are you likely to get correct on your future USMLE after having gone through this resource?
 
Awesome!! Thanks, a bunch!! Especially for the score breakdowns at the bottom. 👍
*bookmarked*
 
In contrast to a post I had made on the Scores thread earlier today, where I said I'd wait a few days to write a UWorld review, I decided that I'm currently in one of my "I don't feel like studying right now b/c my brain is going to implode"-mindsets, so I thought I'd just write the quick review now.

------------

Firstly, UWorld took a lot longer than I had anticipated. That being said, everyone approaches it differently. Some do it in tutor-mode alongside MS2 coursework; some do it timed during the final month of prep; some don't even finish it (you'd have to be insane). I went through it at ~50 Qs/day x ~ 6-7 wks in timed-random. I wanted to go faster, but I couldn't. I knew this QBank is the most important resource alongside FA, so I decided to sacrifice a little time for a bit of extra careful reading (and re-reading and annotating).

Cons:

As people have already mentioned before, you can't copy and paste anything, nor can you PrntScr an image. Despite Uworld's scare that people would illegally distribute their product, for the sake of personal-use, it's rather vexing when you actually do want to save an image or tidbit for later. I'm too lazy to use an external camera, so I just made sure to annotate extra well from anything of high value.

In addition (as people have also already mentioned), the UWorld interface subjugates your entire computer screen, and you cannot Wiki nor PubMed anything without closing out the UWorld block. This would mean that for every block I would review, I would need to close and then re-open it probably at least 20 times.

This might not be an issue with everyone, but for me, it seemed as though ~10% of the questions would improperly load such that the answer choices would be widely spaced apart. I would then need to arrow either to the prior or subsequent question, then back to the question I was working on, in order to get the spacing of the answer choices back to normal. It seems like a minor data-loading glitch that they have. I also have a new computer and good internet, and I haven't experienced that problem on the other QBanks, so it's definitely UWorld.

For blocks that have media-questions, there would be a message box that would pop up prior to commencing them that would remind you to make sure you have headphones, etc. Anyway, given what I've written above, considering the UWorld platform requires you to close a block in order to Wiki/PubMed something, that also meant that every time I'd re-enter the block, the same message would pop up, and I'd have to repeatedly click through it in order to resume my work. I know this doesn't sound like a big deal, but none of us need to see the same message box 20 separate times, particularly when the block's already been finished.

Uworld severely lacks in the biostats and behavioral departments. I did the entire QBank on timed, random assessment, and I exhausted all of the behavioral and biostats questions at ~1500 Qs through (there are 2153 total). Not only that, but are you ready for this one? They offer a separate biostats and epidemiology package, that you can pay for in addition to the QBank, that includes additional biostats questions. It's as though they removed a solid one-third of the user-expected biostats questions from the QBank, and then just placed them into an external platform in order to be lucrative. Not only is this inconvenient, but the quality of the package is far below that of the QBank. It consists of ~30-40 questions sub-divided into sets of 3-6. Following each set of questions, there are a couple of paragraphs that summarize the concepts within those questions, but there isn't actually a critical analysis of each individual answer choice within each independent question. I just didn't understand this at all. It's as though some of the UWorld question-writers didn't want to take the time to analyze each question, so they curtailed their effort, and in the end, just charged people more money. Congratulations.

Anatomy is also weak within the QBank. It is not heavy on CT-scans whatsoever. Kaplan was way better for this. To that effect, Kaplan dominates UWorld with regard to anatomy, behavioral science, biostats and physiology. And are you ready for the hard blow? USMLE Rx beats UWorld for biostats. In general, I thought UWorld biostats was just very disappointing.

Some might view this aspect as a pro, but another con is that I believe the explanations were just way too long. Moreover, the definition of circumlocution is UWorld's explanations. On average, they were about 1-1.5 pages in length per question. I know UWorld is a learning platform, but I don't need to read 1.5 pages on PTH and vitamin D at least 30 separate times within the QBank. Cut to the chase already. One thing that I now realize I liked about Kaplan QBank is that their explanations were much more succinct than UWorld's.

The UWSAs are identical to UWorld QBank. Now let me make a point very clear: the UWorld QBank is only 2153 questions (or 2154 given that they just added a question yesterday). This is already fairly truncated relative to the 3000 in USMLE Rx and the 2994 in Kaplan (Kaplan QBank technically is 2200, but they don't charge you extra for their diagnostic test or two full-length exams), so the fact that UWorld charges extra for the biostats package and the UWSAs is a malfeasance quite frankly. They take advantage of us as consumers because they know everyone needs their product. FA, for instance, could charge $100 per new copy of their book, and guaranteed everyone would still buy it, because we all know we need it. The difference is that the FA authors just aren't as avaricious; they're error-prone instead (ahem, 30-page errata, ahem).

The QBank is not invincible. I encountered ~20-30 errors. The worst part about this is that since UWorld is supposed to be the supreme resource, whenever I'd encounter an error, suddenly I'd freak out and think I was wrong and that I didn't know what I was doing. Then I'd have to go on an unnecessary research tangent for 20 minutes. A couple of simple examples that I can think of off the top of my head: I made a post a few days ago (the QID# is in that post), where UWorld had said ventilation is greater at the lung apices, but it actually increases apex --> base (now imagine if your pulmonology physio is weak; that doesn't help anyone out); just yesterday, I read in one of the UWSA explanations that iron poisoning creates a non-anion gap acidosis, but it's anion-gap --> MUDPILES).

Out of the score sub-divisions, histology accounted for only 17 questions in the entire QBank!! Now how does that make any sense? While going through the QBank, I noticed that I had exhausted all of the histology-category questions very early on, and yet I would still encounter ones that would have a vague single-line vignette, followed by an image of cells and a subsequent question that relied on an ability to analyze the picture. How in the world that isn't classified as histology blows me away. There were probably at least 50 (arbitrary number) pure histo questions in the QBank, so I wasn't able to track my progress in that category accurately at all. I think those questions were generally classified as pathology or anatomy, but not appropriately as histo.

There were no four-stethoscope-location heart sound questions, as there had been in Kaplan. Also, the heart sound questions that UWorld did have, it would almost be impossible sometimes to really hear what was going on, let alone the fact that the sound would play for, no joke, about 1.8 seconds, then stop (whereas Kaplan or Rx might play it for 10 seconds).

I might just have severe retrograde amnesia at the moment (it's the middle of the night here in Australia), but I don't recall there having been any video questions in UWorld, apart from maybe 10, at the most. In general, I found there to be a dearth of media questions.


Pros:

The power of UWorld is in its explanations. When everyone says that UWorld is the best QBank and that nothing else compares, there's isn't, nor has there ever been, a prevarication. UWorld elaborates on concepts and fills in gaps that you probably should have had patched a long time ago in MS1. I had done lots and lots of practice questions before having milked UWorld, and I definitely had quite a few shockers sometimes when I'd get questions wrong that >70% must have thought were cake-easy.

As I said above, I felt the explanations in UWorld were a bit long. They could have conveyed the exact same points in about 80% of the text, but nevertheless, the explanations were generally strong. I'd say ~15% were fantastic, 15% very good, 35% good, 25% fair, 10% poor.

If there's anything I can thank the UWSAs for, it's that their explanations are about 2/3 the length of the QBank explanations.

It would never be the brevity of a particular explanation that would reduce its quality; sometimes the question-writer just didn't address my thought process, or he or she would be too loquacious over some banality at the expense of even a cursory discussion of an important topic. However, ~30% of the explanations were solid.

There are many multi-step questions that require significant integration of knowledge. I wasn't too surprised by many of these because I had already done lots of questions prior to UWorld, but they definitely make sure you know how to apply the material rather than just regurgitate it.

I felt many of the questions were very similar to USMLE Rx's. USMLE Rx definitely got me many points in UWorld- lots of simple tricks that I would have gotten wrong months ago but was now vigilant for.

The integration of cardiovascular pharmacology and physiology is pretty good. If you're a little uncertain as to the absolute specifics regarding where and how the different anti-arrhythmics act/work, rest assured that you'll come out of UWorld knowing that stuff. This is very good because CVS pharmacology is exceedingly high-yield.

Now there's a million reasons why we get questions wrong: ******ed errors, misreading, simply not knowing the info, tricks, etc. I'd say that ~ 1/20 questions or so that I'd get wrong, I'd find myself saying "hm wow. That was a very very good question." The translation of that statement = a question where it would have been nothing that I had encountered through any of the prior practice questions I had ever done, and yet was a very creative way of assessing the knowledge. In other words, UWorld has a few rare questions that are of extremely high value.

There's a comment box. Hurray! If you've done Kaplan QBank and noticed that there's no comment box, at least there's one in UWorld. The only down-side is that they don't pay you like USMLE Rx does to correct their errors (so where's the real incentive? Because you're a good person?).

UWorld has solid biochemistry, microbiology, pathology and neurology.

They give you percent-breakdowns next to every answer choice with regard to how many students chose which (this is in contrast to Kaplan, which just tells you the % answering the question correctly overall). I feel this is important because it teaches you how other people think and/or approach questions. Sometimes you can be proud of yourself for your giftedness. Other times you can realize you're ******ed and need third-grade remediation. It goes both ways.


----------

Anyway, some people have PMed me about wanting me to post about my progress with this QBank and the UWSAs, etc. I list the following scores, not for the sake of self-aggrandizement (by all means, here on SDN, there are probably many genius-lurkers who laugh at how much better they're doing), but just to give people an idea as to the relative difficulties of the question resources:

USMLE Rx (tutor-mode, random; March-April): ~85%

FA Q&A (May): ~94%

Kaplan QBook (May): ~84%

GT QBank (timed, random; June-July-ish): ~85%

NBME3 (end of July): 250

Kaplan QBank (timed, random; August): ~81%

Kaplan full-length tests #1 & 2: ~81%, ~80%

UWorld (timed, random, first-pass; September-mid-October): ~85% = 96th percentile; first half = 84%; final 1000 questions = 86%

Best 3 UWorld subjects: biochemistry, microbiology, pathology

Worst 3 UWorld subjects: behavioral science, biostats, histology

UWSA1 (one week ago; 9-weeks-out from real USMLE) = 264 = ~84% correct

UWSA2 (today; 8-weeks-out) = 262 = ~82% correct

Needless to say, considering the UWSAs are supposed to over-predict by like 20 points, this is the first time I'm "freaking out," especially since everyone seems to get 265+ on them. I managed to get a 12%- and 89%-answering-correctly-question right and wrong, respectively, within the same block today on UWSA2 (and no I'm not just making that up to be entertaining). In general, I felt the UWSAs were very turbulent, and I made quite a few unforgivable errors. I don't need to complain for hours on end here, but if there's anything I've learned, it's that on the real exam day, if I have any extra time at the end of my blocks after already having reviewed the marked questions (usually ~5 minutes / UWorld block), instead of adding it onto my break time, I'll instead use it to go back and do a blitz-review of unmarked questions. The Step1 is once and there's no room for nonsense. I find the error-rate for serious misreadings of unmarked questions is about 1 in 80 or so, which on the real USMLE, is 4 questions that I'd rather have not cause me acute stress disorder during the 3 weeks subsequently. Oh, and a few RedBulls won't hurt either.

I sit the exam December 14th.

I hope that review helps some people.

~Phloston

Hello P.

You seem to be the resident expert and I need advice.

I purchased the 3 question. Banks. Rx, qbank, world. But with time I think I can't do as much as I want. Would you recommend doing world x2 and then only half of the other 2 banks OR just not repeat uworlx and do everything once? I did see Kaplan has high yield so I could just do high yield. I think I have time to do everything once or sacrifice other banks to repeat world.

Are there any huge problem in rx or qbank that would make 1000 or 1500 questions worth skipping... like Kaplan pharmacy or something.

I downloaded these first aid anki flash cards. Do you think those are good to use or just do tons of questions. Thanks
 
In addition (as people have also already mentioned), the UWorld interface subjugates your entire computer screen, and you cannot Wiki nor PubMed anything without closing out the UWorld block. This would mean that for every block I would review, I would need to close and then re-open it probably at least 20 times.

On a Mac, you can open up tons of other things while you're in a UWorld block. This must be PC-specific.


Uworld severely lacks in the biostats and behavioral departments.

I completely disagree. My actual exam was exactly like World with regards to my biostats questions. Behavioral science was pretty spot-on too.

Anatomy is also weak within the QBank. It is not heavy on CT-scans whatsoever. Kaplan was way better for this. To that effect, Kaplan dominates UWorld with regard to anatomy, behavioral science, biostats and physiology. And are you ready for the hard blow? USMLE Rx beats UWorld for biostats. In general, I thought UWorld biostats was just very disappointing.

I thought UWorld anatomy was fine for the exam. Step 1 is not a CT-heavy exam. The handful of questions I had that were imaging related were either basic anatomy or "spot the pneumothorax on CXR" questions.

Some might view this aspect as a pro, but another con is that I believe the explanations were just way too long. Moreover, the definition of circumlocution is UWorld's explanations. On average, they were about 1-1.5 pages in length per question. I know UWorld is a learning platform, but I don't need to read 1.5 pages on PTH and vitamin D at least 30 separate times within the QBank. Cut to the chase already. One thing that I now realize I liked about Kaplan QBank is that their explanations were much more succinct than UWorld's.

There is a "cut to the chase"...the tl;dr summary bit on the bottom of each explanation. Super nice when you got a question right that's a no-brainer and you just want to make sure you didn't miss any concept even though you got the question right.

the UWorld QBank is only 2153 questions (or 2154 given that they just added a question yesterday). This is already fairly truncated relative to the 3000 in USMLE Rx and the 2994 in Kaplan

Quality > quantity 😉

Out of the score sub-divisions, histology accounted for only 17 questions in the entire QBank!! Now how does that make any sense?

Histo is ridiculously low-yield for Step 1! Surprised there's even a dedicated subject heading for it in Step 1 qbanks these days.

There were no four-stethoscope-location heart sound questions, as there had been in Kaplan. Also, the heart sound questions that UWorld did have, it would almost be impossible sometimes to really hear what was going on, let alone the fact that the sound would play for, no joke, about 1.8 seconds, then stop (whereas Kaplan or Rx might play it for 10 seconds).

UWorld heart sounds do indeed blow

I might just have severe retrograde amnesia at the moment (it's the middle of the night here in Australia), but I don't recall there having been any video questions in UWorld, apart from maybe 10, at the most. In general, I found there to be a dearth of media questions.

There are none, which blows I agree

UWorld (timed, random, first-pass; September-mid-October): ~85% = 96th percentile; first half = 84%; final 1000 questions = 86%

Best 3 UWorld subjects: biochemistry, microbiology, pathology

Worst 3 UWorld subjects: behavioral science, biostats, histology

UWSA1 (one week ago; 9-weeks-out from real USMLE) = 264 = ~84% correct

UWSA2 (today; 8-weeks-out) = 262 = ~82% correct

Solid performance. Don't take the non "265+" score personally.

I sit the exam December 14th.

You're ready to take it right now.
 
Couple things:

1) Alt+Tab will get you out of the UW window, even while you're in the midst of reviewing answers. You still won't be able to copy/paste, but at least you can browse the internet without having to exit the block.

2) I disagree that "UWSA is exactly like UW." I think the UWSA questions are significantly easier/straightforward (which is reflected by the higher avg % scores as compared to the qbank questions). Ultimately I feel like my exam was around UWSA difficulty. In other words, somewhere between NBME and UW qbank.
 
This might not be an issue with everyone, but for me, it seemed as though ~10% of the questions would improperly load such that the answer choices would be widely spaced apart. I would then need to arrow either to the prior or subsequent question, then back to the question I was working on, in order to get the spacing of the answer choices back to normal.

You can also just click on the same question, and the spacing problem will be fixed.

Uworld severely lacks in the biostats and behavioral departments.

Anatomy is also weak within the QBank. It is not heavy on CT-scans whatsoever.

I disagree. Biostats and behavioral were my weak subjects too, and the questions that were on the real exam were extremely similar to UWorld. If anything, the Uworld question were harder than on Step 1.

Anatomy is also very random. Unless they add a couple hundred more questions, it'd be impossible to cover every part of the body. All of the anatomy questions on my exam, asked for nit-picky details (random unimportant structures).

Out of the score sub-divisions, histology accounted for only 17 questions in the entire QBank!! Now how does that make any sense?

That's because there are very few histo questions on the real thing. It's incredibly low-yield.

In general, I found there to be a dearth of media questions.
True...Uworld should really update their media question. It doesn't make any sense that they try to mimic Step 1 on everything except for media.

Edit: Woops, didn't see that the post above me said almost the same thing.
 
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You've been preparing since March...holy crap, I'm jealous. No reason why you shouldn't break a 260 on this exam.
 
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Just thought I'd also mention that UWorld QID# 6678 of UWSA2 says, in one of the explanations, that cyclosporine, tacrolimus and sirolimus are all calcineurin inhibitors. Sirolimus is notably not a calcineurin-inhibitor.

This is exactly what I was talking about. I had to go do external research just to confirm.

The question also says it was last updated 7/8/2010. I cannot possibly be the first person to comment on that to them. Not sure what their delay is in changing things.
 
They've dropped one question #1999 I think, about reserpine causing depression. I sent feedback about #1725 I think, a neurology question, I got no response.

I agree that the strength of UWorld lies in the explanations. Normal histology didn't seem as important as histopathology on Step 1. Cell EM is very likely to turn up though.
 
They offer a separate biostats and epidemiology package, that you can pay for in addition to the QBank, that includes additional biostats questions.

It consists of ~30-40 questions sub-divided into sets of 3-6.

Let me get this straight. They have just 30-40 questions in that $25 biostats & epidemiology package? 😕
 
Let me get this straight. They have just 30-40 questions in that $25 biostats & epidemiology package? 😕

For the record, I just entered the platform and added them up. There are 73 questions in it. So I guess I underestimated by quite a lot.

If it's any consolation, there are 30-40 worthwhile questions at most. The others are like, "which is the median?"

Nevertheless, I hope you catch my point though that those questions easily could have been included within the actual QBank, considering the QBank itself isn't even that long and lacks biostats, to the say the least.
 
For the record, I just entered the platform and added them up. There are 73 questions in it. So I guess I underestimated by quite a lot.

If it's any consolation, there are 30-40 worthwhile questions at most. The others are like, "which is the median?"

Nevertheless, I hope you catch my point though that those questions easily could have been included within the actual QBank, considering the QBank itself isn't even that long and lacks biostats, to the say the least.

Like I said before, UWorld covers biostats and behavioral quite well in my opinion. Biostats and epi are not subjects where there will be surprises. It's all constructing the tables and calculating relative risk/odds ratios/etc or picking the correct study design or bias. Behavioral science/ethics questions will be just about as much of a crapshoot as anatomy, and it's impossible to cover every scenario, so I give UWorld a pass on that one.

The biostats sideshow you're talking about here is unnecessary unless you really need remediation on biostats. The Step 1 biostats stuff is super basic.
 
Great post. Thanks Phloston! 😍

I was actually waiting for this one. You pretty much nailed everything I had in mind to wonder about UW. I think you'll do great on that test and I also agreed with Kaputt, I think you're ready now. However, if you feel the need to consolidate even more, then do so.

The trend is that UWSA do overpredict by close to 20 points but if you're 8 weeks out, and 260+ is your goal, I think you'll cross that in a breeze.

Thanks for your valuable input. Bookmarked it also.

Best of luck mate. 👍
 
What do you guys reccomend?

Option 1.
World x2
Half of Kaplan/rx

Option 2
World x1
Kaplan x1
Rx. x1

Is it better to repeat uworld or do extra qbank
 
What do you guys reccomend?

Option 1.
World x2
Half of Kaplan/rx

Option 2
World x1
Kaplan x1
Rx. x1

Is it better to repeat uworld or do extra qbank

Having taken the exam yesterday, I would say that you should try to go through uworld questions again, unless you remember everything the first time, in which case once is enough. But in my case, I had to go thru the questions again to put things into long term.
 
Having taken the exam yesterday, I would say that you should try to go through uworld questions again, unless you remember everything the first time, in which case once is enough. But in my case, I had to go thru the questions again to put things into long term.
Thx for feedback.

In general I feel I need more repetition than most med students. Hence my idea of a second pass. Do you guys agree?
 
What do you guys reccomend?

Option 1.
World x2
Half of Kaplan/rx

Option 2
World x1
Kaplan x1
Rx. x1

Is it better to repeat uworld or do extra qbank

Honestly, I seriously thought USMLE Rx was fantastic. It will nail FA for you, and in terms of this exam, FA is what you need. If you can, do UWorld x2, Kaplan x1 and USMLE Rx x1 or 2.

Great Job Phloston.

What is GT Q bank ?

GT has both flashcards (their main software) and a separate QBank. The questions are pretty crap, but they did pick out a few things from FA that even USMLE Rx hadn't touched. Out of the question sources I've done, it was the worst, but they were useful for quite a few of the respiratory and cardio formulas. In other words, after I went through GT QBank, I didn't have to think twice about anything related to formula-use. Every question resource has its advantage, and GT is getting you to know your formulas. UWorld, however, is the only resource I've come across thus far that has tested the Winter's formula (if you study that now, you'll get the question right in their QBank, which I believe <25% got correct).

Thx for feedback.

In general I feel I need more repetition than most med students. Hence my idea of a second pass. Do you guys agree?

Listen, no one on this forum will tell you that UWorld x2 isn't a good idea. Plan to do UWorld two times regardless.
 
UWSA2 a while back: 214
NBME7: 231, about 2 weeks ago
UWSA1, just now, 257!

While doing the exam I was feeling like **** thinking i'm bombing it completely.. I have to say it's a good confidence boost. But I thought it was quite tough. Does it really over-approximate by TWENTY points? I have three weeks till my exam.. any advice please? I really want to guarantee scoring about 240. Please advice. Perhaps I can postpone my exam by a week or ten days.
 
PHloston, anatomy is a difficult subject to tackle...do you remember any topics in anatomy that they like to emphasize on from the first time you took step 1?
 
UWSA2 a while back: 214
NBME7: 231, about 2 weeks ago
UWSA1, just now, 257!

While doing the exam I was feeling like **** thinking i'm bombing it completely.. I have to say it's a good confidence boost. But I thought it was quite tough. Does it really over-approximate by TWENTY points? I have three weeks till my exam.. any advice please? I really want to guarantee scoring about 240. Please advice. Perhaps I can postpone my exam by a week or ten days.

When I said that they over-predict by 20 points, I don't mean that the CI=95% for them predicting 16-24 points greater than your future actual exam. It's just that, as opposed to the NBMEs, which are generally strong predictors within +/- 3-4 pts, it's been far far more common where people have posted about having performed much better on the UWSAs (particularly #2) than on their actual exams. In contrast, people usually don't fall more than a couple points below their NBMEs if they do end up getting a crappy question allotment. The point is: the UWSAs are sensitive for high-scorers but not specific, whereas the NBMEs are both sensitive and specific.

Edit:

PHloston, anatomy is a difficult subject to tackle...do you remember any topics in anatomy that they like to emphasize on from the first time you took step 1?

I'm not sure what you mean. I don't take the Step1 till December. On the other hand, if you're asking about high-yieldness in terms of QBank questions, there's quite a bit of stuff to cover.
 
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Oh my bad man, I must have misunderstood you...I meant what do you suggest other than the qbanks that would be high yield for anatomy? Thanks!
 
PHloston, anatomy is a difficult subject to tackle...do you remember any topics in anatomy that they like to emphasize on from the first time you took step 1?

It's mostly nerve injuries and questions about blood vessels. Basically know your regional anatomy (especially in the limbs) enough that you could answer a novel question you've never seen before. Anatomy is a crap-shoot, and no qbank can be comprehensive. There may be some anatomy questions you can't prepare for, unless you re-memorize everything from first year anatomy (and even then, you might get a question more obscure than that.) It's not worth it.

No reason to buy an extra qbank just for more anatomy questions. I'm not sure if there are any good extra resources either. I used FA and World, was definitely not an anatomy expert during school, and did great on anatomy and in general on Step 1. Take my advice for what it's worth.
 
It's mostly nerve injuries and questions about blood vessels. Basically know your regional anatomy (especially in the limbs) enough that you could answer a novel question you've never seen before. Anatomy is a crap-shoot, and no qbank can be comprehensive. There may be some anatomy questions you can't prepare for, unless you re-memorize everything from first year anatomy (and even then, you might get a question more obscure than that.) It's not worth it.

No reason to buy an extra qbank just for more anatomy questions. I'm not sure if there are any good extra resources either. I used FA and World, was definitely not an anatomy expert during school, and did great on anatomy and in general on Step 1. Take my advice for what it's worth.

I agree with Kaputt that anatomy is definitely a crap-shoot. As he's said, limb anatomy is heavily tested (arms > legs, but yet again, everyone's tests differ, so know both). For limbs, know all of the innervation, as that is exceedingly high-yield, and blood supplies, whilst tested slightly less often, I would still know very well for safety sake. In FA, take a very very close look at the carpal bones in the MSK chapter and look at where and how everything articulates. I had had a practice question in Kaplan with a tricky X-ray that I had gotten wrong because I didn't know the exact orientations of the bones as well as I had thought. Ureter anatomy is also extremely extremely high-yield; having done >12,500 practice questions so far, I've had probably 20 on the ureter alone. Considering only a fraction of that total question-count is anatomy, that's an f'ng lot of questions on the ureter. Know its relations with respect to pretty much everything. I would also say that in terms of images, know your CT scans of the thorax really well. Kaplan and UWorld together have been great for this. Also, imaging of the knee is big; be able to identify the ACL and PCL on even a crappy image and know where they attach. In addition, I've noticed some questions that like you to know the location of the prostate, and to be able to identify it posteriorly to the pubic symphysis. USMLE Rx was the only question source I've used that had tested ankle anatomy/ligaments; Kaplan and UWorld didn't touch it.

That's just a short list. Once again, anatomy is mega-broad.
 
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Just thought I'd update:

Currently 6.5 weeks out

NBME5 = 257

During the exam, I honestly thought it was super-easy, so I'm a bit surprised that I didn't even get 260 on it. Not really sure what happened. I'm just hoping that going back through USMLE Rx and UWorld both twice and giving FA a final pass will make a difference somehow, but while I was taking the test, at no point had I felt like I had forgotten anything. A bit odd.

I plan on sitting NBME6 in ~12 days or so, after I finish USMLE Rx again. Then I'll save the remaining four NBME forms (7, 11, 12, 13) for the final two weeks to give myself an accurate prediction.

Does anyone know how NBME5 correlates with the real thing? I can't remember from the Scores thread offhand.
 
Just thought I'd update:

Currently 6.5 weeks out

NBME5 = 257

During the exam, I honestly thought it was super-easy, so I'm a bit surprised that I didn't even get 260 on it. Not really sure what happened. I'm just hoping that going back through USMLE Rx and UWorld both twice and giving FA a final pass will make a difference somehow, but while I was taking the test, at no point had I felt like I had forgotten anything. A bit odd.

I plan on sitting NBME6 in ~12 days or so, after I finish USMLE Rx again. Then I'll save the remaining four NBME forms (7, 11, 12, 13) for the final two weeks to give myself an accurate prediction.

Does anyone know how NBME5 correlates with the real thing? I can't remember from the Scores thread offhand.

I wonder how you'll do on NBME 7. I know it's the more difficult out of the NBMEs. Not sure what was the point of posting your grades considering you've been preparing for this exam for almost a year.
 
I wonder how you'll do on NBME 7. I know it's the more difficult out of the NBMEs. Not sure what was the point of posting your grades considering you've been preparing for this exam for almost a year.

Why are you specifically curious about NBME 7?

I also note that that's the second time you've mentioned my prep-length in this thread.
 
You did it offline, didn't you? Did you use the number correct * 1.39 formula or those charts? I'm not sure what the curve is like on the older NBMEs given that you said 95% on NBME 3 was ~250.
 
You did it offline, didn't you? Did you use the number correct * 1.39 formula or those charts? I'm not sure what the curve is like on the older NBMEs given that you said 95% on NBME 3 was ~250.

The only ones I've done offline are NBMEs 1, 2 and 4.

I did both NBME3 (620/250) and NBME5 (650/257) online.

And I didn't mean to come off the wrong way by my above post. I didn't actually mean that I was surprised as much as I was just annoyed.
 
Ah alright. What was the percentage correct if I may ask? I have a friend who's using mostly offline versions and he wanted a prediction, to which I said to use the *1.39 formula.

I don't think many people use NBME 5 for any sort of correlation. There was the one guy who said NBME 3 a week before the exam would underpredict by 10 odd points, and his college advised everyone to take it 1 week out. Some people on this forum or maybe some other forum have said the question style is most similar to NBME 6.
 
Why are you specifically curious about NBME 7?

I also note that that's the second time you've mentioned my prep-length in this thread.

Lol, just busting your balls, to see how you'd react. I thought 7 was a bit more difficult compared to the earlier NBMEs. Not sure why I found it so difficult. There was around a 25point difference between 7 and the other NBMEs. Not sure what happened to me that morning...😕
 
Lol, just busting your balls, to see how you'd react. I thought 7 was a bit more difficult compared to the earlier NBMEs. Not sure why I found it so difficult. There was around a 25point difference between 7 and the other NBMEs. Not sure what happened to me that morning...😕

Dunno, must've been a bad day for you. I got the same thing on NBMEs 7 and 11 (took them about a week apart).
 
Ah alright. What was the percentage correct if I may ask? I have a friend who's using mostly offline versions and he wanted a prediction, to which I said to use the *1.39 formula.

I don't think many people use NBME 5 for any sort of correlation. There was the one guy who said NBME 3 a week before the exam would underpredict by 10 odd points, and his college advised everyone to take it 1 week out. Some people on this forum or maybe some other forum have said the question style is most similar to NBME 6.

As far as I'm aware (i.e. using the unreliable Dr. Esha-800 answer key + searching the internet/forums for answers for any questions I wasn't 1000% sure about), I got 9 wrong on NBME5. So you can tell your friend 95.5% on NBME5 = 257. Figure that there's a possible error margin of 1 or 2 questions.
 
Wow is the curve that harsh on the old NBMEs? And you didn't do them with extended feedback then I take it, since you're not sure about the incorrect answers. So 9 incorrect on NBME 5 gets you the same score as 15 incorrect on NBME 13, and it's not much easier.
 
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