Just started my dedicated study for <6 weeks. TERRIFIED> I have a lot of q's so get ready.
1. What do people do during this protected time - should I do another Qbank Like Kaplan? I have done UW and am still going through it. Have to finish RX unless someone tells me it's not worth it. OR should i focus on READING (books, FA, BRS physio etc)? Is it wrong to try to "learn a entire subject" via doing the q's in a q bank -- seems like this is kinda risky since it just leaves what you learn up to waht the test writers chose to focus on...
2. these "outta nowhere" q's people are talking about -- could these be experimental?
3. I feel like i'm weak on physio and everyone says it's a huge part of the test so I'm doing Guyton q's but they seem perhaps too "hard science" for step 1.
4. do people do a comprehensive review during this time or focus on their weaknesses? I feel like I"m super strong on certain things (like the things you can memorize to the point where I'm like "DUH" but then on certain concepts i'm like "when did i leaern this"). Trying to minimize going over those points where I"m like "i'd get this q right in my dreams"
5. do people use the UWSA's as "learning tools" too or more of a gauge? I've taken a few NBMEs but not the UW ones and I always feel like I "got lucky" if i got a q right -- i guess i'm trying to say I don't feel very confident in my answers and i wonder if i have gaps in my knowledge. Not sure how to adequately get them all covered in this time - systematically or focus on what i percieve myself to be weak on?
6. Were the ethics and BS q's on the real test more like the NBME's or more like UW? On UW i find them hard. On the NBME's I seem to do pretty well and perceive them as more straightfwd than UW. Just tryign to figure out how to adequately tackle this.
7. not sure if i shoudl devote any time to anatomy -- seems like ppl are saying it's low yield for the time it'd take. that said, i feel scared relying on what i remember from over a year ago. Should i devvote more time to embryo than anatomy?
8. What are people doing for immuno? Do ppl like the Kaplan Immuno videos?
9. Same for histo - what are ppl doing and what do they think of KLN histo?
1. Do UW x 2, or at least 1.5 (redoing your old questions). Only if you're going to complete that should you focus time on completing another qbank. Some people here hate on Rx and Kaplan, but a lot of people also think they are worthwhile. I definitely think it was. Noone really argues that UW isn't the biggest priority.
2. No reason to think that they are or are not experimental. Easy questions can be experimental, too. If every question was straight forward and right out of FA, then a lot of students would get every single question right.
3. It seems that subjects (outside of Path) that are "heavily tested" goes through different waves (i.e., whatever you heard someone had a lot on will be different from the next group). But, a firm grasp of physio giving its tie-ins with path and pharmacology is important. The Guyton review book is generally considered overkill/too much of a time waste during dedicated period--but if you have the time for it and you're weak in physio, it'll definitely give you a stronger understanding than BRS and FA will.
4. People do both. One suggestion others have given (which I plan to follow) is go through FA once quickly, then go through a 2nd time with a dark marker and black out all the stuff you know, leaving yourself a condensed version to study through the last time or two you go through it.
5. Gauge yourself and review the questions. Obviously, with NBMEs you can't really go through all the ones you got right and "guessed" on, but at least you knew enough to guess right. The number one reason for them is to gauge performance, but if I spend 4 hours doing questions, I'm gonna make sure I know what I got wrong, too. Also, everyone feels like they get lucky a lot of times, you have to trust that if you are consistently getting 250+ on NBMEs (or whatever score) then that is reflective of your knowledge level.
7. Generally the advice I get is no. FA and UW should cover enough of these topics, and you will get very few questions from them.
6 and 8 I don't have any comment on.
Just my opinions! Ultimately figure out what works for you and make your own decisions.