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Sorry for being a newb, what's TPR? Is that not the princeton review 😳TPR vs Princeton is consistently debated with no real winner. I know that for me, the TPR course fit my schedule better and had more hours of classtime (by a large chunk). Either way your only gonna get out what you put in.
Most people take the MCAT in April/May of their junior year, BTW. The August test date puts you at a slight disadvantage in the application cycle. If you take the spring MCAT you can apply early (primaries start June 1st), have your score by June, and start doing secondaries as early as the summer. If you wait until August, you won't have scores until September, and your whole app cycle will be delayed.
Thats not to say there aren't a huge chunk of August people every year that do just fine with no adverse effects. But if you want to be early and ahead of the game, take it in April. ALso, that way if you do badly, you still have a chance to retake the exam for the same app cycle.
Does anyone know which course is better the Kaplan MCAT course or the Princeton MCAT course?
Also when do people usually take there MCAT August before their senior year right?
TPR=The Princeton ReviewSorry for being a newb, what's TPR? Is that not the princeton review 😳
coolbeans thanksTPR=The Princeton Review
Kaplan is the best, because it has test materials that are closest to the actual MCAT. Princeton review is a distant second.
Examkrackers is a complete waste of money. Their practice tests do not at all resemble the actual MCAT.
i'll say up front that i teach for kaplan, and also took the kaplan class when preparing for the mcat, so please take the following with your own best judgement (and grain of salt). kaplan in my estimation is by far better than princeton review, and that is the conclusion i came up with before i took a prep course when looking into which program was better. kaplan has a higher standard for minimum score needed to teach mcat classes than princeton review. the price of the class includes all aamc materials (including practice sections in addition to the practice tests) which princeton review doesn't have all of. kaplan's own practice material is more comprehensive than princeton review's. kaplan teaches you specific strategies (i'm not going to mention which ones, but i'll give you a hint, it's for the verbal section) that princeton review students haven't even heard of. in addition, if you want to get a sense of how prepared kaplan is and how plugged in they are to the system, take this into consideration: the aamc planned on making the MCAT a computer based test about 10 years ago in a closed door meeting with their executive board. you know who was sitting in on that meeting? a kaplan representative. so kaplan's curriculum has already been formatted for the last 10 years in anticipation of that change. princeton review and exam krackers obviously did not have any representative at that meeting. finally, kaplan basically writes out a whole script that the teachers are supposed to know for each class in the teacher's edition of the book. so there is less chance that they will forget to tell you something you should know because it's there in front of them. last i had checked with a friend of mine who works for princeton review, they don't do that for their teachers. lastly, to the comment about exam krackers cutting out all the unnecessary stuff...kaplan already beat EK out in that department. the material covered in the books has nothing less and nothing more than you need to know for the MCAT. they don't throw in any extra information and nothing is left out. if you know every word of the kaplan science material and *know how to apply it* you should get a 15 on each section. of course you might be able to say that about other test prep companies, but kaplan makes it the easiest because it doesn't cover any unncessary information. lastly, straight from kaplan memos...starting january 10th, kaplan students will be able to access all 8 aamc practice tests on the computer in a real testing environment interface. how many do competitors offer? "The Princeton Review may stick with offering only 3 AAMC exams. ExamKrackers offers 2 and Berkeley Review encourages students to purchase their own AAMC exams. Keep in mind this information is subject to change." hope that helps.
But I took and liked TPR. My main problem with Kaplan is that they have one person teach you everything. And lets face it, no one is an expert at everything. At TPR you get a separate teacher for each subject which gives you much greater expertise for each.
But when I was picking I heard that TPR is better if you need a good quick review of everything. And Kaplan was better if you already knew everything and wanted test strategies. So I took TPR because I needed the review.
can't you be equally prepared then by just buying the kaplan review books off someone and buy the 8 aamc exams on your own as well
kaplan has a higher standard for minimum score needed to teach mcat classes than princeton review... Finally, kaplan basically writes out a whole script that the teachers are supposed to know for each class in the teacher's edition of the book. so there is less chance that they will forget to tell you something you should know because it's there in front of them.
i'll say up front that i teach for kaplan, and also took the kaplan class when preparing for the mcat, so please take the following with your own best judgement (and grain of salt). kaplan in my estimation is by far better than princeton review, and that is the conclusion i came up with before i took a prep course when looking into which program was better. kaplan has a higher standard for minimum score needed to teach mcat classes than princeton review. the price of the class includes all aamc materials (including practice sections in addition to the practice tests) which princeton review doesn't have all of. kaplan's own practice material is more comprehensive than princeton review's. kaplan teaches you specific strategies (i'm not going to mention which ones, but i'll give you a hint, it's for the verbal section) that princeton review students haven't even heard of. in addition, if you want to get a sense of how prepared kaplan is and how plugged in they are to the system, take this into consideration: the aamc planned on making the MCAT a computer based test about 10 years ago in a closed door meeting with their executive board. you know who was sitting in on that meeting? a kaplan representative. so kaplan's curriculum has already been formatted for the last 10 years in anticipation of that change. princeton review and exam krackers obviously did not have any representative at that meeting. finally, kaplan basically writes out a whole script that the teachers are supposed to know for each class in the teacher's edition of the book. so there is less chance that they will forget to tell you something you should know because it's there in front of them. last i had checked with a friend of mine who works for princeton review, they don't do that for their teachers. lastly, to the comment about exam krackers cutting out all the unnecessary stuff...kaplan already beat EK out in that department. the material covered in the books has nothing less and nothing more than you need to know for the MCAT. they don't throw in any extra information and nothing is left out. if you know every word of the kaplan science material and *know how to apply it* you should get a 15 on each section. of course you might be able to say that about other test prep companies, but kaplan makes it the easiest because it doesn't cover any unncessary information. lastly, straight from kaplan memos...starting january 10th, kaplan students will be able to access all 8 aamc practice tests on the computer in a real testing environment interface. how many do competitors offer? "The Princeton Review may stick with offering only 3 AAMC exams. ExamKrackers offers 2 and Berkeley Review ‘…encourages students to purchase their own AAMC exams.' Keep in mind this information is subject to change." hope that helps.
Lol, take this with a SHAKER of salt. Examkrackers offers 5 full length AAMC CBTs last I checked. Also, the changes for the CBT that Kaplan had the 10 year jump on? Were talking format and timing differences. The science stayed the same. Each question is weighted more, and that plays into EKs strategies quite well. The general concensus is that Kaplan books and EK books aren't so comparable. Even so, around here the EK materials are far more lauded.
My main problem with Kaplan is that they have one person teach you everything. And lets face it, no one is an expert at everything. At TPR you get a separate teacher for each subject which gives you much greater expertise for each.
can't you be equally prepared then by just buying the kaplan review books off someone and buy the 8 aamc exams on your own as well