I took my boards back before Memorial Day, so it seems weird that some people are just now finishing...
I didn't get any special hotel deals, but I did manage to fly to Tampa for free. I specifically got one of the Delta credit cards last fall, used it for a couple of months to spend the required amount of money to get the bonus/reward Skymiles and I had enough for the round trip. I still haven't decided if I'm going to keep the card or cancel it, as it has an annual fee after the first year.
I called the night before and scheduled room service to drop lunch off at my room during the break both days. Fairly expensive, but the food was good and it saved me some hassle. I'm not sure how Pollux was able to request an empty fridge - my room (all of the rooms?) had a mini fridge in it that was stuffed to the gills with booze and snacks on sensors that charge your room if you remove anything.
I feel pretty confident that I passed. I "flagged" any questions that I wasn't fairly sure about, probably 30-40% of the questions in each section. So, assuming I missed all of the flagged questions (I hope not!) I would hopefully still have gotten at least 60% correct. For reference, I also scored very well on the RISE as a fourth year (>650 overall).
AP glass/virtual slides:
Overall, most of the cases seemed fair. There were relatively more questions from more common specimen types, like breast, GI and prostate. I agree with Pollux,
most of the zebras seemed to be fairly distinctive - generally if you'd seen a picture/recut of the entity, you would recognize it. There were a few that just baffled me. The glass slides that I got were all clean, intact and of good quality - none were faded/poorly stained or broken and no one put them away out of order. The software for viewing the virtual slides was easy to use. There were a few cases that were blurry/out of focus at high magnification. I felt that the biggest problem was the time limit (less than 3 minutes per slide), particularly when a few of the virtual slide cases required you to scan multiple levels/cores/fragments across the entire slide for what could be a very focal finding. This was the only part of the entire exam that I felt rushed on. I made it through all of the cases once, then I had just enough time to glance briefly at the cases I had flagged a second time, but that was it. I definitely didn't have time to go to the gym!?!
😱
I finished this section in two hours and had some time to go to the gym before getting lunch.
AP written:
The questions were short and straightforward - you either knew the factoid they wanted or you didn’t. I thought that questions involving IHC were reasonable (i.e. they did NOT ask about really old stains no one uses regularly anymore). I felt it was the easiest part of the whole exam.
AP images:
The quality of *most* of the photos were decent. Although, even if the photo was of good quality, that doesn’t necessarily mean I could figure out what they were trying to show on some of the cyto questions. The cyto questions were a mix of super obvious/easy “gimmies” and questions that I could narrow down to 2-3 choices, but would then have to guess. I had the most time leftover at the end of this section (even after carefully reviewing everything I had flagged) and I was able to leave early.
CP practical:
As previous posters have stated, this is essentially all blood bank and chemistry with a sprinkling of lab admin (you can see the breakdown yourself with the “blueprints” the ABP provides on their website). This was the most difficult part of the entire exam for me, but I also felt like I was able to work through and at least make a reasonable educated guess on many questions that seemed awful initially. The lab admin questions were easier and more fair than I expected overall. A lot of the chemistry and blood bank questions required you to really understand/interpret/apply findings in the context of a clinical scenario. The questions were much harder, longer and more involved than those in the Compendium Companion.
CP written:
Overall, I felt that the CP written was a bit more difficult and MUCH more frustrating than the AP written for several reasons. First, it felt like the question writers were often deliberately trying to trick or confuse you - read VERY carefully. Generally, the answer choices were longer than the AP section and many sounded roughly correct at first glance. Distractors could be incorrect due to one tiny/minor detail and each answer choice would be about a *different* detail, so you couldn’t narrow it down to two or figure it out with just logic/test-taking skills. Second (in complete agreement with Pollux here), some questions were extremely esoteric, involving a level of detail that I had never even heard of (i.e. you would need even more detail than what is in the Compendium to answer the question correctly).
CP images:
Questions are micro and heme. The quality of the images was generally decent and, assuming you knew the disease entity, organism or test they were depicting, it was usually fairly obvious what they were trying to show. I agree that the difficulty was similar to the RISE. The thing that I found the MOST frustrating in this section was the choice of content. There were many questions, moreso micro than heme, covering extremely outdated techniques that I specifically did not cover in my studying. I decided that there was a limited amount of time to study and limited space in my memory - I reasoned that outdated techniques were the LEAST likely to be useful to me in my “real life” after the exam, so I didn’t waste any of my time on them.