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Hi everyone,
I thought I would post some tips on how to do well on the PCAT for those beginning to study. I just got my scores so I feel confident in my advice. Also, I feel I can give a more honest advice because I got accepted into my first choice school and I'm not in competition anymore to get in to a school, no need to hold back. I got into a school that doesn't look at PCAT so I did spend a lot of time studying for nothing. 😉😀
Composite 449-99
Of course the commonsense advice is to learn everything while you take the class, which helped me the most
For the verbal section, don't waste anytime on GRE words, there are no GRE words on there. I read here on SDN to study the GRE words and it did not help at all. Maybe there was one or two GRE words if that on the test. If you do need to study vocab, I thought the Barron's Wordfest book was good. These are college level words and the format of the book made it easy to study. I hated the Kaplan course and thought it was a big waste of money but they had some good advice. Their analogy solving tips are pretty good, I used those for the analogies. There was at most 2 words I didn't know on my test and those words were weird words that you wouldn't have studied for anyway.
For Biology, read the Kaplan bio section, not a month before the test but many months before the test. Here's the bad part. The Kaplan bio section is really long and boring and on the test you'll only get tested on 10% of the material. But you don't know what material you need to know so you must study the other 90% which will waste a lot of time, but that's how it goes.
For reading comp, I took the advice on SDN and bought the Examcrackers 101 Passages in MCAT Verbal Reasoning. When I got the book from Amazon, I got really lazy and didn't even do one passage. The book looked very difficult and it didn't really get the essence of how they test you on the PCAT. There is no test prep book that gets the Reading Comp section correct. The PCAT has those questions like, what is the tone of the author, etc. and nobody really does it well. The Kaplan reading comp material was okay but way too easy compared to the real PCAT. If you need to do something, I guess the Kaplan reading comp material from the class is minimally acceptable, but not good. My advice would be to read the newspaper everyday, I read the Wall Street Journal and my local newspaper.
For Math, Kaplan is way too hard, Barrons was too easy. Cliffs might be the best out of the three. Again, there is no prep book that gets the math section correct. You have to be quick on this section. This is the only section I didn't get a 90 or above because I ran out of time. The last 5 questions were quick guesses. I would say though that if it comes down to it. Do the Cliffs and then try the Kaplan classroom math tests but don't worry if you bomb the Kaplan, it's too hard.
For Chemistry, the Cliff's was the best book. If you have time read the Kaplan book for the Chem sections but like bio, it is long and boring. I studied the Ochem stuff from Kaplan classroom material but I felt that my test did not have much Ochem in it and that I wasted a lot of time. Just do Cliff's and take the Kaplan tests.
For writing, I got a 3 and 3 because I was lazy. The kaplan advice is very good on this section. This is the only part that I thought Kaplan did a good job. If you follow their strategy, it should be good but it takes practice and I didn't practice at all, hence the 3's.
Oh yeah, take a no score of the PCAT to get a feel for it. I took the August test and freaked out when I saw it and did a no score, I did a no score because I freaked on the essay and didn't get close to finishing the math.
Good luck
I thought I would post some tips on how to do well on the PCAT for those beginning to study. I just got my scores so I feel confident in my advice. Also, I feel I can give a more honest advice because I got accepted into my first choice school and I'm not in competition anymore to get in to a school, no need to hold back. I got into a school that doesn't look at PCAT so I did spend a lot of time studying for nothing. 😉😀
Composite 449-99
Of course the commonsense advice is to learn everything while you take the class, which helped me the most
For the verbal section, don't waste anytime on GRE words, there are no GRE words on there. I read here on SDN to study the GRE words and it did not help at all. Maybe there was one or two GRE words if that on the test. If you do need to study vocab, I thought the Barron's Wordfest book was good. These are college level words and the format of the book made it easy to study. I hated the Kaplan course and thought it was a big waste of money but they had some good advice. Their analogy solving tips are pretty good, I used those for the analogies. There was at most 2 words I didn't know on my test and those words were weird words that you wouldn't have studied for anyway.
For Biology, read the Kaplan bio section, not a month before the test but many months before the test. Here's the bad part. The Kaplan bio section is really long and boring and on the test you'll only get tested on 10% of the material. But you don't know what material you need to know so you must study the other 90% which will waste a lot of time, but that's how it goes.
For reading comp, I took the advice on SDN and bought the Examcrackers 101 Passages in MCAT Verbal Reasoning. When I got the book from Amazon, I got really lazy and didn't even do one passage. The book looked very difficult and it didn't really get the essence of how they test you on the PCAT. There is no test prep book that gets the Reading Comp section correct. The PCAT has those questions like, what is the tone of the author, etc. and nobody really does it well. The Kaplan reading comp material was okay but way too easy compared to the real PCAT. If you need to do something, I guess the Kaplan reading comp material from the class is minimally acceptable, but not good. My advice would be to read the newspaper everyday, I read the Wall Street Journal and my local newspaper.
For Math, Kaplan is way too hard, Barrons was too easy. Cliffs might be the best out of the three. Again, there is no prep book that gets the math section correct. You have to be quick on this section. This is the only section I didn't get a 90 or above because I ran out of time. The last 5 questions were quick guesses. I would say though that if it comes down to it. Do the Cliffs and then try the Kaplan classroom math tests but don't worry if you bomb the Kaplan, it's too hard.
For Chemistry, the Cliff's was the best book. If you have time read the Kaplan book for the Chem sections but like bio, it is long and boring. I studied the Ochem stuff from Kaplan classroom material but I felt that my test did not have much Ochem in it and that I wasted a lot of time. Just do Cliff's and take the Kaplan tests.
For writing, I got a 3 and 3 because I was lazy. The kaplan advice is very good on this section. This is the only part that I thought Kaplan did a good job. If you follow their strategy, it should be good but it takes practice and I didn't practice at all, hence the 3's.
Oh yeah, take a no score of the PCAT to get a feel for it. I took the August test and freaked out when I saw it and did a no score, I did a no score because I freaked on the essay and didn't get close to finishing the math.
Good luck
. muy importante
Thank you so much. I was planning on having a no score on my first one in August and then take the next in October. My friend said that I should not take any tests past August since school pick students right away before October and it will be too late for me to do anything.