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- Aug 9, 2009
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Well, I read a lot of great threads here on this subject before starting a new thread about this. I'm loving the unique information each thread has given, and the different opinions of teaching methods.
I am a boring type of person and like the old-school plain memorization for this method. A set of flashcards would be cool, but not really needed. As long as the book has good writing, complete information needed to pass the USMLE, and not too many/too little pictures.
I have liked what I have seen, heard in reviews, and read myself inside "High-Yield Neuroanatomy" by James D. Fix. It looks basic to what you need to graduate medical school and pass the USMLE. But is it enough coverage for a high caliber medical school?
However, I was also debating buying "Neuroanatomy: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, and Systems, North American Edition" by Duane E. Haines. It looks to me to be directed towards facts and knowledge rather than ease of learning. I don't mind, I would actually rather not have the ease of learning. However, it it going overboard? Would this over complicate things? I wouldn't want to remember some rare diseases and forget the commonly tested upon ones.
I am getting the book so I can go into neurosurgery later, so I hope for a book suitable to satisfy a top tier school.
I would appreciate a compare-and-contrast from some who may have read both.
Thank you in advance 😉
I am a boring type of person and like the old-school plain memorization for this method. A set of flashcards would be cool, but not really needed. As long as the book has good writing, complete information needed to pass the USMLE, and not too many/too little pictures.
I have liked what I have seen, heard in reviews, and read myself inside "High-Yield Neuroanatomy" by James D. Fix. It looks basic to what you need to graduate medical school and pass the USMLE. But is it enough coverage for a high caliber medical school?
However, I was also debating buying "Neuroanatomy: An Atlas of Structures, Sections, and Systems, North American Edition" by Duane E. Haines. It looks to me to be directed towards facts and knowledge rather than ease of learning. I don't mind, I would actually rather not have the ease of learning. However, it it going overboard? Would this over complicate things? I wouldn't want to remember some rare diseases and forget the commonly tested upon ones.
I am getting the book so I can go into neurosurgery later, so I hope for a book suitable to satisfy a top tier school.
I would appreciate a compare-and-contrast from some who may have read both.
Thank you in advance 😉
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