My Positive Part 1 Experience

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Fox3

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I've been lurking here a while, here are my thoughts on my June Part 1 exam. I got a raw score in the mid-90s with a curve of 3 points....almost no curve at all! I was pretty fired up and scared but found the exam to be not so bad. Don't waste time memorizing lists upon lists of BS because that's not going to help. You seriously cannot expect to remember...you must gain experience and be able to accurately guess. It's about general knowledge and intuition and not rote memorization. You must be able to think your way through rather than just memorize stuff. There are repeats but no more than 10%. It's still worth doing all the released questions because it focuses your studying. The topics will be the same but the questions will be different.

-I didn't use the Dental Decks, I think they're terrible, insufficient, and give a very false sense of security.
-I used the Kaplan book mainly but it's only an OK source---the information is there but it's not real conducive to memory. You should read it twice but don't think you're done!
-Kaplan "Dent Essentials" is amazing, buy the Kaplan course or get your hands on a copy.
-NBDE First Aid is pretty average---lots of mistakes. But, when you're catching the mistakes and correcting them, that means you're making progress. It's best for anatomy only...some mistakes are pretty serious in this book and will screw you up.
-USMLE First Aid is a much better book than any other source, especially for physio and biochem. Know you physio and organ systems incredibly well.
-Dental anatomy is a joke, seriously, insultingly easy. Practically any source is OK for this---class notes or Kaplan should be fine.

-Approach studying with a curious mind to learn. Look up stuff on Wikipedia that you don't know. Make notebooks of stuff you need to clarify.

My #1 advice is to be curious. You cannot expect to memorize rote knowledge. You must gain a basic knowledge base and then be able to apply that to similar diseases and conditions---maybe some of which you've never heard of.

Good luck...this is a very fair and doable test unlike some of the naysayers seem to say on this forum.

Jack Fox
 
hii..
thnx 4 sharing ur experience...
wats Kaplan "Dent essentials" ???is it a singl book n is it different frm kaplan review book n lecture notes?? frm whr can i get dat???
 
I've been lurking here a while, here are my thoughts on my June Part 1 exam. I got a raw score in the mid-90s with a curve of 3 points....almost no curve at all! I was pretty fired up and scared but found the exam to be not so bad. Don't waste time memorizing lists upon lists of BS because that's not going to help. You seriously cannot expect to remember...you must gain experience and be able to accurately guess. It's about general knowledge and intuition and not rote memorization. You must be able to think your way through rather than just memorize stuff. There are repeats but no more than 10%. It's still worth doing all the released questions because it focuses your studying. The topics will be the same but the questions will be different.

-I didn't use the Dental Decks, I think they're terrible, insufficient, and give a very false sense of security.
-I used the Kaplan book mainly but it's only an OK source---the information is there but it's not real conducive to memory. You should read it twice but don't think you're done!
-Kaplan "Dent Essentials" is amazing, buy the Kaplan course or get your hands on a copy.
-NBDE First Aid is pretty average---lots of mistakes. But, when you're catching the mistakes and correcting them, that means you're making progress. It's best for anatomy only...some mistakes are pretty serious in this book and will screw you up.
-USMLE First Aid is a much better book than any other source, especially for physio and biochem. Know you physio and organ systems incredibly well.
-Dental anatomy is a joke, seriously, insultingly easy. Practically any source is OK for this---class notes or Kaplan should be fine.

-Approach studying with a curious mind to learn. Look up stuff on Wikipedia that you don't know. Make notebooks of stuff you need to clarify.

My #1 advice is to be curious. You cannot expect to memorize rote knowledge. You must gain a basic knowledge base and then be able to apply that to similar diseases and conditions---maybe some of which you've never heard of.

Good luck...this is a very fair and doable test unlike some of the naysayers seem to say on this forum.

Jack Fox
hi.thanx for ur information.i am planning to give NBDE part 1 in mid november.can u guide me pls what i can study in this time??are dental decks,old questions and dentessentials enough for preparation?
 
hi i want to apply for the international dentist program at university of pacific n for that i need to copy additional toefl score report copy but this university does not have any two digit department code for dentistry which the toefl people ask for. can anybody suggest me what code should i write
 
I've been lurking here a while, here are my thoughts on my June Part 1 exam. I got a raw score in the mid-90s with a curve of 3 points....almost no curve at all! I was pretty fired up and scared but found the exam to be not so bad. Don't waste time memorizing lists upon lists of BS because that's not going to help. You seriously cannot expect to remember...you must gain experience and be able to accurately guess. It's about general knowledge and intuition and not rote memorization. You must be able to think your way through rather than just memorize stuff. There are repeats but no more than 10%. It's still worth doing all the released questions because it focuses your studying. The topics will be the same but the questions will be different.

-I didn't use the Dental Decks, I think they're terrible, insufficient, and give a very false sense of security.
-I used the Kaplan book mainly but it's only an OK source---the information is there but it's not real conducive to memory. You should read it twice but don't think you're done!
-Kaplan "Dent Essentials" is amazing, buy the Kaplan course or get your hands on a copy.
-NBDE First Aid is pretty average---lots of mistakes. But, when you're catching the mistakes and correcting them, that means you're making progress. It's best for anatomy only...some mistakes are pretty serious in this book and will screw you up.
-USMLE First Aid is a much better book than any other source, especially for physio and biochem. Know you physio and organ systems incredibly well.
-Dental anatomy is a joke, seriously, insultingly easy. Practically any source is OK for this---class notes or Kaplan should be fine.

-Approach studying with a curious mind to learn. Look up stuff on Wikipedia that you don't know. Make notebooks of stuff you need to clarify.

My #1 advice is to be curious. You cannot expect to memorize rote knowledge. You must gain a basic knowledge base and then be able to apply that to similar diseases and conditions---maybe some of which you've never heard of.

Good luck...this is a very fair and doable test unlike some of the naysayers seem to say on this forum.

hello sir
im a dental graduate frm india n im plannin to tke up nbd in the starting of nxt year.cud u pls guide me whr n how to strt wth.wht all course material is required??
waiting fr yr reply.
 
I used only Dental Decks and landed a 95 in Dec 06. However I mainly used the information on the back of the card. Also I went over all the released test before I attempted the Decks to gauge where I was. I then went through all the Decks Twice and retook All the test. They real exam was not as bad as I was expecting> the only section you really need to know all the info is the Dental Morph and occlusion, though you should probably learn that stuff anyway. Hope this helps
 
I used only Dental Decks and landed a 95 in Dec 06. However I mainly used the information on the back of the card. Also I went over all the released test before I attempted the Decks to gauge where I was. I then went through all the Decks Twice and retook All the test. They real exam was not as bad as I was expecting> the only section you really need to know all the info is the Dental Morph and occlusion, though you should probably learn that stuff anyway. Hope this helps
hay mac 95 is an amazing score and as your post is titled different strokes for different fokes...I just wanna highlight the most important point in your post that u have given ur exam in 2006... those who are currently preparing for their part1 please dont go by the strategy which students have used til 2006 as currently we have a different exam and scoring pattern. hope this helps 🙂 good luck to everyone...👍
 
I just took part I boards on monday, and I don't feel too good about it. I took several older part 1 released exams and scored in the 90's consistantly, but I feel like the real thing was much more difficult than older exams.
 
hey..thankz for ur wounderfully explained post.i almost freaked out when i realised i could NEVER rememebr all that i m suppose to, but u make it sound like i can do it after all.how do i get hold of usmle first aid..is that a book or flash card or something else...i have read deck once....so wud like to read kaplan n usmle first aid..plzz lemem know.
 
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