Official 2014 Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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Going to start with the classic "long time lurker but I will only post now to share how high of a score I got"

I have a hard believing that many of you who score 240+ actually feel like crap after the exam...I would imagine at this stage of your education, you would be fairly good at predicting how you felt on how you did.

I just wanted to say that I'm tired to hearing posts after the exam saying "That was the hardest thing ever." followed up by a post (a few weeks later) "I'm pleasantly surprised by how well I did and let me share my NBME practice scores and UWorld percentages."

NBME and UWorld are great predictors of your ultimate performance on the actual exam. Readers, don't be fooled by some of these people on SDN.
 
Going to start with the classic "long time lurker but I will only post now to share how high of a score I got"

I have a hard believing that many of you who score 240+ actually feel like crap after the exam...I would imagine at this stage of your education, you would be fairly good at predicting how you felt on how you did.

I just wanted to say that I'm tired to hearing posts after the exam saying "That was the hardest thing ever." followed up by a post (a few weeks later) "I'm pleasantly surprised by how well I did and let me share my NBME practice scores and UWorld percentages."

NBME and UWorld are great predictors of your ultimate performance on the actual exam. Readers, don't be fooled by some of these people on SDN.
jags.gif
 
Many people come to this forum to look for concrete advice on how to prepare for the step 1 exam from people who have taken it. Seeing as people in medicine are also people of science, data points such as practice scores can go into helping someone to determine whether such exams were predictive of score on "the real deal." Sounding annoying is just kind of the name of the game with this beast. I prepared my write up above before I checked my score and was going to post no matter what I got. If my practice scores weren't predictive, that's important information, too, I feel. I have used this particular forum to help prepare for this important exam (HOWEVER, not the be all-end all of anything, certainly. Step 1 is just a number), so I figured if my experience can help someone else then I would share what I did, what I thought worked and what could have gone better. I assume many people think in similar ways.

To respond to another point you make: Step 1 is unlike anything I personally have ever taken. I know people who scored very well who came out of the exam feeling like they got hit by a bus. I know people who came out thinking "well, that was alright actually." My exam, honestly, went so fast it was kind of a blur but afterwards I kept remembering a few easy questions that I got wrong and had trouble recalling anything else. Doesn't feel good. I totally get that "that person" who worries that they failed but then totally beasts the exam is basically the most annoying person on the planet, but other people on here have stated that they wish someone had prepared them that feeling like crap was normal and just part of the process.

tl;dr: Chill out.

Going to start with the classic "long time lurker but I will only post now to share how high of a score I got"

I have a hard believing that many of you who score 240+ actually feel like crap after the exam...I would imagine at this stage of your education, you would be fairly good at predicting how you felt on how you did.

I just wanted to say that I'm tired to hearing posts after the exam saying "That was the hardest thing ever." followed up by a post (a few weeks later) "I'm pleasantly surprised by how well I did and let me share my NBME practice scores and UWorld percentages."

NBME and UWorld are great predictors of your ultimate performance on the actual exam. Readers, don't be fooled by some of these people on SDN.
 
Just got the old score back recently and I thought it was worth noting that my score was very close to the average of my NBME self assessments

UWSA #1: 234
#11, 3 weeks out - 232
#15, 2 weeks out - 241
#16, 5 days out - 251

Actual: > 240

For prep, I didn't do anything during second year except focus on classes. I was continually pressured by administration and classmates to start doing Q-bank during the year which, while helpful to help study for classes, was not necessary.

1. Did DIT about 8-10 videos per day <-- This sucked, recommend trying to spread it out more for less videos per day
2. Highlighted first aid while I watched videos
3. Did 2-3 mock blocks per day before doing DIT videos if I had time
4. Did maybe 50% of Pathoma which was great to help understand foundational concepts, but just didn't have enough time to finish it

Actual exam: After walking out of the test, like everyone mostly says on this thread, I felt very unsure about what just happened. There isn't a single practice exam out there that can prepare you for the mental anguish of taking Step 1. But just know that everyone else went through the same or similar experience - find comfort in that. I marked at least 10 questions per block, straight up ran out of time on 3 blocks while I was finishing the last question. I ran out of time even though I was finishing my NBME practice exams with sometimes as much as 30 minutes to spare on a 50 question block.

All in all, try to stay relaxed during studying, if you have to move things around, then move them around....Give yourself some wiggle room to change things, take a day or 2 off during your dedicated study period - oh and take the day off before the exam. Thats just my experience and of course everyone is different...Barely escaped with my sanity.
 
Exam day was June 27, had about 5 weeks of free study time after finals.
I have to give special thanks to Phloston for his posts, I used his advice to do all 3 Qbanks throughout the year and it really paid off. Also thanks to all the outstanding scores here on SDN which provided a lot of motivation. Goal was >250

Used:
USMLErx
Kaplan Qbank
Uworld Qbank random timed: 77%

First Aid x3, Pathoma many times throughout the year, along with Goljan Audio.

School administered NBME: 225
4 weeks out NBME 12: 247
3 weeks out NBME 13: 243
2 weeks out NBME 15: 245
UWSA 1: 260
1 week out NBME 16: 251
Free 150: 89%


Actual Step 1: 252


Very happy with my score. Congrats to everyone who worked so hard on this exam!
 
Quick question for you recent test takers or soon to be test takers: For biochemistry, do you recommend to do First aid and Uworld, with that being sufficient enough to do well on the exam? Or do you recommend that Kaplan LNs/videos or a different source be used for further details?

My background in biochem was good when i had the class in first year, but I literally have forgotten all of it. I was hoping to do DIT and read/annotate notes into FA, followed by doing Uworld and annotating those notes into FA as well...but I wanted to see if anyone here who recently took the exam did something differently and used a source outside of FA/Uworld for the biochemistry part of the exam!
 
Quick question for you recent test takers or soon to be test takers: For biochemistry, do you recommend to do First aid and Uworld, with that being sufficient enough to do well on the exam? Or do you recommend that Kaplan LNs/videos or a different source be used for further details?

My background in biochem was good when i had the class in first year, but I literally have forgotten all of it. I was hoping to do DIT and read/annotate notes into FA, followed by doing Uworld and annotating those notes into FA as well...but I wanted to see if anyone here who recently took the exam did something differently and used a source outside of FA/Uworld for the biochemistry part of the exam!

Everyone has a different exam. However, in my experience the Biochemistry was simple and the things that were emphasized in Uworld were the only things that showed up.
 
Exam day was June 27, had about 5 weeks of free study time after finals.
I have to give special thanks to Phloston for his posts, I used his advice to do all 3 Qbanks throughout the year and it really paid off. Also thanks to all the outstanding scores here on SDN which provided a lot of motivation. Goal was >250

Used:
USMLErx
Kaplan Qbank
Uworld Qbank random timed: 77%

First Aid x3, Pathoma many times throughout the year, along with Goljan Audio.

School administered NBME: 225
4 weeks out NBME 12: 247
3 weeks out NBME 13: 243
2 weeks out NBME 15: 245
UWSA 1: 260
1 week out NBME 16: 251
Free 150: 89%


Actual Step 1: 252


Very happy with my score. Congrats to everyone who worked so hard on this exam!
Congrats! Did you use the qbanks starting in August? or January? Thanks!
 
I still maintain the best prep for step 1 is doing well and learning the material during the preclinical years. There are a solid 10-20 questions I can think of that I got right solely because of things I learned during school that weren't in review books.
😵
 
Congrats! Did you use the qbanks starting in August? or January? Thanks!

I bought USLMErx and Kaplan in September and used them by system alongside class. In January I switched over to random blocks to finish USMLErx and Kaplan (annotating into FA while doing this).
 
And they were in your school syllabi?


Yeah actually. But I could just infer based on knowing that somewhere I learned about this random condition/disease process and stowed it away in the back of my mind. It just popped out on test day from the answers.

It was mainly slight recall of what I had learned but also ruling out the other choices that didn't fit completely with the presentation in the question. This was true for a lot of the anatomy questions, which others have said. It was also true for physiology arrow questions in particular on the real thing.

Basically: I knew one of the answers made more sense than the others (ie. it was the "most correct" answer).

That being said, I BUSTED MY BUTT my first to years trying to learn everything in every class, and it saved me on Step 1 on more than a few questions.
 
Have been following this thread for a while and while I don't think I have much new to offer I will share my experience. I did FA x2 once during our last quarter and once during dedicated study(5 weeks), Pathoma x2(just the audio while I drove to school I never read the book), papa goljian x1 all of Uworld and most of kaplan Q bank.

NBME ranged from 245-247
UWSA 253,254
Real deal 245

Test day difficulty I would say was a mix of NMBE and Uworld, I actually left the test thinking that I got about a 245... guessed it exactly lol. I will say one thing make sure you focus on your weaknesses biostats was always my lowest area, I put it off to study till right before the test and got completely destroyed by it on test day... probably could have grabbed a few more points if I had given it due time and study, oww well. Anyway I will sound off that getting the info down during your first two years is truly the best prep for this test. Also don't let this test define you as a medical student or physician. Good luck to those who still have this journey ahead of them.
 
Have been following this thread for a while and while I don't think I have much new to offer I will share my experience. I did FA x2 once during our last quarter and once during dedicated study(5 weeks), Pathoma x2(just the audio while I drove to school I never read the book), papa goljian x1 all of Uworld and most of kaplan Q bank.

NBME ranged from 245-247
UWSA 253,254
Real deal 245

Test day difficulty I would say was a mix of NMBE and Uworld, I actually left the test thinking that I got about a 245... guessed it exactly lol. I will say one thing make sure you focus on your weaknesses biostats was always my lowest area, I put it off to study till right before the test and got completely raped by it on test day... probably could have grabbed a few more points if I had given it due time and study. Anyway I will sound off that getting the info down during your first two years is truly the best prep for this test. Also don't let this test define you as a medical student or physician. Good luck to those who still have this journey ahead of them.

Are you happy with your score? I got a 247 and it doesn't feel that high too me compared to all the 250s/260s
 
Are you happy with your score? I got a 247 and it doesn't feel that high too me compared to all the 250s/260s
I am happy with my score because I can honestly say that I gave it my best. Also it keeps the doors open to anything I could want to do (still not sure what that is exactly) and while yes I was hoping to score better I refuse to let a test like the step define me as a student or physician. And while comparing ones self to others is only natural it's never a good thing to do. I think that everyone that can honestly say to them selves that they did their best should be happy with their score what ever it is.
 
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Just finished, thought I'd add my study plan/thoughts:

Studies:
-Started thinking on it in December. Tried to go through ~1-2 sections of FA with Pathoma, Kaplan QBank, and other resources that I needed (i.e., HYNA, RR Pharm) per week while in classes. Finished 1 full pass of FA at this rate by first week of April.
-Kaplan Diagnostic test on 2/7: 57%
-School CBSE on 3/28: 207

-Used the CBSE results and the month of April to focus on weakest areas, and keep trucking through my now pretty-well annotated FA. Also began UW after the CBSE, and hung up Kaplan having completed 67% of the bank (69% correct).
-NBME 12 on 4/19: 230
-NBME 11 on 4/29: 224

-School finished up second week of May. Once school ended, I made a day-by-day schedule to push through the DIT videos and the rest of UW (about 50% still to go at that point). Spent about 10-12 hours per day, 6 days per week on studying. Started DIT on 5/7. Also began sprint triathlon training (might as well have a goal to keep you in shape and moving during all this, and nothing gets you up in the morning like a cold swim).
-NBME 16 on 5/17: 243
-Finished up DIT on 5/28. Finished up UW on 5/30. Did the whole bank random, timed, 46qs, and had a 72% correct rate (definitely upward trending, though - started in mid-60s, had low-80s consistently towards end). Annotated UW and DIT thoroughly into FA.
-NBME 13 on 5/31: 258
-Decided 2nd pass on UW incorrects wouldn't be worth the time to me, so grabbed a buddy and we did all of FA in one rapid pass throughout this last week. Took most of the last 1.5 days before the test off.
-2014 "Free 138" on 6/4 - 85%
-USMLE 1 on 6/7: ??

I felt like my test was mashed of what I had been reading on here - anatomy, pharm, path, weird stuff... I don't think my thoughts would honestly be all that helpful. For those curious, my test was heavy on GU, Renal, and MSK. It seemed a little odd to me, but you take the 322 you're dealt, I guess. Anything over 240 would make me happy. Best advice that I can offer is to be sure you've got your timing down based on NBME 15/16 and UW, because the vignettes are definitely on the longer side for the most part. I'll update once the scores are posted. Cheers to everyone who's finished, and best of luck to you who are still getting it done!

Posting back... xxx(edit)! Elated.
 
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Are you happy with your score? I got a 247 and it doesn't feel that high too me compared to all the 250s/260s

You did very well. In life, there will always be someone greater or lesser than you in any one attribute. Given the "right" test and conditions, you could have broken 250. Don't look a gift horse in the mouth.
 
Hey guys,

I am new to these forums. I have been browsing the net for a few weeks and this place has the best information by far. I just wanted to know if anyone has any Step 1 advice. I started studying a few months ago. I am an IMG (out of school for a 2-3 years). I have been using a Kaplan lectures, First Aid and Goljan Audio. I have been doing some old UWorld questions offline. I am planning on taking the test in late September. I am very nervous about this test. I want a decent score ( meaning i would be happy with a score in the mid 220s).

My practice test results
UWSA1 -190 (May 18)
UWSA2-209 (June 18)
NBME12-215(July 18)

Am I on the right track?
 
Hey guys,

I am new to these forums. I have been browsing the net for a few weeks and this place has the best information by far. I just wanted to know if anyone has any Step 1 advice. I started studying a few months ago. I am an IMG (out of school for a 2-3 years). I have been using a Kaplan lectures, First Aid and Goljan Audio. I have been doing some old UWorld questions offline. I am planning on taking the test in late September. I am very nervous about this test. I want a decent score ( meaning i would be happy with a score in the mid 220s).

My practice test results
UWSA1 -190 (May 18)
UWSA2-209 (June 18)
NBME12-215(July 18)

Am I on the right track?

It looks like you may need to do more practice questions. One exam a month is probably not enough.
 
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Hey guys,

I am new to these forums. I have been browsing the net for a few weeks and this place has the best information by far. I just wanted to know if anyone has any Step 1 advice. I started studying a few months ago. I am an IMG (out of school for a 2-3 years). I have been using a Kaplan lectures, First Aid and Goljan Audio. I have been doing some old UWorld questions offline. I am planning on taking the test in late September. I am very nervous about this test. I want a decent score ( meaning i would be happy with a score in the mid 220s).

My practice test results
UWSA1 -190 (May 18)
UWSA2-209 (June 18)
NBME12-215(July 18)

Am I on the right track?

Add in Pathoma and get UW online. so you can used to taking it online. I think something like DIT would be great for you as well since you are removed somewhat from school.
 
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Add in Pathoma and get UW online. so you can used to taking it online. I think something like DIT would be great for you as well since you are removed somewhat from school.

Thanks for the advice. My plan is to get a UWorld subscription in August and do DIT as my final review. I have found that UWSA had harder questions but more lenient grading. The NBME questions were easier but the grading was harsher. I appreciate all the advice!
 
Thanks for the advice. My plan is to get a UWorld subscription in August and do DIT as my final review. I have found that UWSA had harder questions but more lenient grading. The NBME questions were easier but the grading was harsher. I appreciate all the advice!

DIT is usually used more upfront to help you learn FA better. Sort of teach it to you. I did it twice. And it helped me get a solid base. Then you just have to hammer down everything in Pathoma and FA along with UW. Maybe use a few other resources if you are bad at it and need deeper understanding. But for a 220 and where you are I think what I mentioned above would be enough. But, you definitely need to be doing more questions.

UW will get you there.
 
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I have noticed on the forum that many of you guys are able to convert your scores from Uworld or NBME to a score that would be similar to the step. Is there a site or a chart that I can use to do the same or is it a formula?
 
I have noticed on the forum that many of you guys are able to convert your scores from Uworld or NBME to a score that would be similar to the step. Is there a site or a chart that I can use to do the same or is it a formula?

Each NBME comes with a conversion scale. UWSA do as well. UW % is just an estimated guess. No real concrete there.

Best I could figure was you want to be near 70% near the end if you want a 235+
 
First of all, my apologies for getting in the way of all these 240+ streak on sdn, but did anyone else feel like total CRAP after writing the exam? I took it yesterday, and I keep imagining myself failing. People here are talking 5-10 flags per block, but I was literally guessing on every other question for blocks 3 and 4. Next 3 weeks of waiting will be a nightmare for me, but I was wondering if anyone shared a similar experience and still managed to pass. My goal was a 220 but now I'm just hoping to pass with a 200+.
 
I had the same experience as you. i was scoring fine on nbmes but the real thing was just insane. And it wasn't just two blocks for me, it was pretty much the whole test
 
The exam felt the same way for me. NBMEs were completely different. The score I got was just about 5 points under the NBMEs though, so they are pretty good predictors. I got a 248.
 
I had the same experience as you. i was scoring fine on nbmes but the real thing was just insane. And it wasn't just two blocks for me, it was pretty much the whole test

First of all, my apologies for getting in the way of all these 240+ streak on sdn, but did anyone else feel like total CRAP after writing the exam? I took it yesterday, and I keep imagining myself failing. People here are talking 5-10 flags per block, but I was literally guessing on every other question for blocks 3 and 4. Next 3 weeks of waiting will be a nightmare for me, but I was wondering if anyone shared a similar experience and still managed to pass. My goal was a 220 but now I'm just hoping to pass with a 200+.

From what I've gleaned from this thread so far is that no matter how you feel after the test, the same thing pretty much happens:
1) You had plateau-ed in your NBME scores near the end of your dedicated time. You can expected a score near the average of your recent NBMEs +/- 3 points
2) You were still making gains and continuously saw increases up until the test date. You can expect a score that can be 5-10 above points of your NBME average
3) Something happened during your test, you had a real freak out (asthma/panic attack), or you did not budget your time well and consistently finished your blocks scrambling to do the last 5 questions in the last 2 minutes or so. You can expect a 5-10 point decrease from your most recent NBMEs

Just feeling bad after taking the exam/marking extra questions per block doesn't seem to have much of an effect. I don't think I have ever heard people have ever had a 20+ point drop from their NBMEs
 
First of all, my apologies for getting in the way of all these 240+ streak on sdn, but did anyone else feel like total CRAP after writing the exam? I took it yesterday, and I keep imagining myself failing. People here are talking 5-10 flags per block, but I was literally guessing on every other question for blocks 3 and 4. Next 3 weeks of waiting will be a nightmare for me, but I was wondering if anyone shared a similar experience and still managed to pass. My goal was a 220 but now I'm just hoping to pass with a 200+.

Yeah, I felt exactly like this on my exam day. I was scrambling hardcore to finish my questions on many of the blocks. I left and thought that there was no way I even touched the average. I had an average of 71% overall on UW randomized.

Ended up with a 246. Don't dread it too much. Seems like it's a general trend on this thread.
 
InVivo said:
Took the 6/24 test. It was definitely one of the those straightforward ones similar to NBME/UWorld. Curve will definitely be hard.

There were a lot of weird ethics questions that weren't addressable by FA and I wasnt able to elminate down to less than 2 answers.

I have WAYY too much to say about this experience, so I'll try to keep it short.
Goal: 250+
Grades in MS1/MS2: Slightly above average
Resources: Pathoma x2 (started using it during MS2 year to supplement, two full passes during dedicated) , FA x2.5 (started after MS2), Uworld x1 (66% first pass, started after MS2)

Study schedule:
  • 6 weeks. Started after school year ended.
  • First 2 weeks: 1 organ system per day. (e.g pathoma stream in the morning, FA in the afternoon, Uworld blocks at night). Took the weekend after this off.
  • Last 4 weeks: Continue organ system per day schedule but cut down on pathoma/FA. Up my uworld/picmonic studies. Watch way too much NBA Finals/WC soccer.
  • Last week: Read notes of Goljan's lectures/reviewed a "most common anatomy correlates" ppt 2-3x/Review biochem every day (my weakness)/Pholston's micro
Practice Tests (Test taken on 6/24):
  • MCAT 36+
  • NBME 12 (3 months before; required by school): 170. I didn't study for this at all, but the questions didn't seem that bad. I first saw the scaled score (230) and thought to myself, “man this is gonna be easy!”. Then I saw it was correlated to a ~170, Lol.
  • UWSA1 – (4 weeks before) 231 - I was really pleased with this score and didn't know yet that it way over predicts. Didn't think it was hard or easy, and I hadn't covered reproductive system yet, so I was really optimistic with this score.
  • NBME 12 (3 weeks before) 217 – Whoa, this was a shock to me, because I felt like I had a good grasp of the material and the UWSA1 score was so high. I scored a better percentage of questions better on this than the UWSA1, so I just couldn't understand why the score had dropped so much. This was probably the catalyst to join picmonic.
  • UWSA2 (2 weeks before) – 252– Okay, wtf is going on. This is way too good to be true. I finally find out that this test over predicts. Not really knowing what to think of this score, I just took it as a ceiling for my scores.
  • NBME 15 (1.5 weeks before) – 230 – Crap. I didn’t think this was hard, and I didn’t think there would be such a drop off from UWSA2. I began to become really worried
  • NBME16 (1 week before) – 234– Ugh. Still not progressing the way I want.
  • Free 150 (3 days before) – 87%- Whoa. Correlates with a 250+? I’ll just say I made a lot of progress this last week and go into the exam confident.

The day before my test, I took about 6 hours off and spent it with some family and my significant other. We had a long walk around a park and it really numbed me. When I got home, I looked over a few notes, but that day overall was pretty relaxing. I went to sleep around 9pm, which I know FA tells you not to sleep too early, but I didn't have much problems with sleep. I woke up at 6am, and I got a ride to the testing center. I was still numb during this time, like my brain was just floating. I got worried that I wasn't feeling anxious, and it wasn't until I was being checked in by my proctors that I started getting anxious. It felt good.

The test was also just autopilot as well. I had heard on SDN that you should expect a test harder than anything you could have imagined. I got a first block where I marked around 10 questions (about average for an NBME test). Continued onto the second block without a break. When I did leave the room for a break (after blocks 2,4,5,6), I opened first aid and checked answers. Probably shouldn't do that, but I’m that type of person. Also, I checked an answer that I got right on a previous block, and that EXACT question showed up again. I wasn't really hungry so I ate just a little bit during some of the breaks, but all the blocks were fairly NBME-like where I was marking around 10 questions. Only during the last block was a under real time pressure. I was usually able to finish the block with 5-7 minutes left to review the marked questions.

My test was heavy on pharm and micro. Very little biochem/anatomy. Which really played to my strengths. Some weird behavioral questions, but I did the best I could to narrow down the choices and make an educated guess.

Final Score: ~250. Wow. Due to the score estimators and my NBME avg/Uworld %, I was mainly expecting something in the range of 232-242. I had performance feedback right at about the time scores were released, so I wasnt really listening too much to what my attending was saying, and was just nodding thinking about checking my score.

Tips:
-You know yourself. If you are not where you know you can be at a certain time in STEP studying, PUSH BACK YOUR DATE. I was advised not to do that by my professors, but I simply was not going to be ready by my original time. I pushed it back by a week, and I really think it helped a lot, because I was still making gains.

-Guys, I have heard this crazy thing where you write down your dream score somewhere at home and circle it, so you can see it every day. I wrote down my dream MCAT score on my whiteboard, and I got that score. I wrote down 250 for STEP and the same thing happened. Sometimes you need a reminder of your goal, because it can get lost in your worries and frustrations during studying.

-Don’t listen to the radio during dedicated time. I didn't because I did not want songs stuck in my head while I was studying or taking the test. It still happened during my practice tests, but I believe that this was effective. It pissed off my family and girlfriend a little though.

-Study in an environment that reduces your obligations. I went home to study for a part of my dedicated study and had my mom cooking meals and doing laundry for me. Holy moly, that’s 10 hours of freed up time a week.

-Picmonic- This program was amazing and after 2-3 runs of some of the weaker subjects, I really began to think of them as strengths. I really do believe if you are one of those learners who often memorizes something, and you often picture where it was on that page you read, that this program is effective.
 
-Guys, I have heard this crazy thing where you write down your dream score somewhere at home and circle it, so you can see it every day. I wrote down my dream MCAT score on my whiteboard, and I got that score. I wrote down 250 for STEP and the same thing happened. Sometimes you need a reminder of your goal, because it can get lost in your worries and frustrations during studying.

My mom actually predicted my exact score 3.5 weeks before my exam and told me about it at the time. It was pretty impressive. She said she saw it in a dream. My dream prediction was way off though, considering it's impossible to get a 249.3
 
UWORLD 1, 2 = 254, 260 respectively
NBME 13 - 254
NBME 15 - 252
NBME 16 - 252

Real thing - 242...

Pretty disappointed. I'm interested in going into ophthalmology but i feel like my score is too low now. by the time we apply, i feel like the average score will be in the mid 240s.... i would love to hear some feedback and what my chances are by the time i apply. thanks in advance..
 
I scored higher on all those NBMEs than you did (save for 15 by 2 points) and scored nearly 10 points lower than you on the real exam. Chin up. 240+ is really a good spot for any specialty. Don't look too much into the score inflation stuff, there's no hard evidence that the most competitive specialties are ALL getting more competitive, and by how much.

thanks for the word of encouragement. yea i know i shouldn't be complaining esp with my knowing that there are other people who have been doing better than me on the practice but ended up with a lower score. i'm really trying to get over this but it's been pretty tough.
 
Has anyone really seen many questions on embryo? And how about the ovary neoplasm and all that jazz? I hate those sections and really get bogged down right now trying to learn it better.
Heart embryo ftw. The embryo I had was obnoxiously easy and not something you needed to study beyond FA. Regarding the neoplasms ovary/testicular I was never taught these in class other than the very minimum and I struggled to learn these. Goljan said know the most common and just guess and move on, especially if you struggle with learning the individual idiosyncrasies. This was enough for my test and it served me well.
 
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