Official 2016 Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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Transposony

Do or do not, There is no try
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Congrats on being done!

How were your practice exams, and did you feel like it was a comparable experience?

My exam is monday and I'm sh*****ng bricks.

Progress so far:
12:249
13:258
15:249
UWSA1:258
UWSA2:249
16:258
17:258
Free 120: 88% at prometric center

these scores have been amazingly consistent. Taking 18 tomorrow....and that's pretty much it.

I really hope the beast on monday lives up to this track record...

I just took NBME 18 and felt absolutely devastated. This was by far the hardest exam for me out of all of the practice tests I took. I felt like I knew nothing....

Score: 243, I'm pretty devastated right now with that drop. Exam tomorrow...starting to think about post-poning...idk what to do.
 
I just took NBME 18 and felt absolutely devastated. This was by far the hardest exam for me out of all of the practice tests I took. I felt like I knew nothing....

Score: 243, I'm pretty devastated right now with that drop. Exam tomorrow...starting to think about post-poning...idk what to do.

If it makes you feel any better this seems to be the trend amongst myself and all my peers as far as NBME 18 going down by quite a bit. My actual exam was nothing like NBME 18 if that's any consolation. If it were me- I'd take the test and not post pone. Your scores are still great overall and from what I've read most folks score lower on 18


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I just took NBME 18 and felt absolutely devastated. This was by far the hardest exam for me out of all of the practice tests I took. I felt like I knew nothing....

Score: 243, I'm pretty devastated right now with that drop. Exam tomorrow...starting to think about post-poning...idk what to do.
Take the test, you had a bad exam. Let it go and crush it tomorrow. This is why they say not to take one too close to the exam date. Gotta keep your mental game strong. You obviously know your content according to your NBME's, the game is all in your head now.
 
Well thanks for the encouragement guys...man that really bummed me out earlier. Reviewed the whole thing and yea...I think part of the problem was plowing through all 200 without a break, kinda felt guilty for leaving this thing for the last day and just wanted to do it faster. But either way, NBME 18 was a hell of a test.
 
Hey guys. Taking the beast this Wed. Was wondering if we can bring our own ear plugs? Does it have to be in an unopened package? Thanks.
You can bring your own earplugs, yes. I don't think it has to be unopened (they'll want you to take them out for inspection, regardless).
 
They'll probably get in the way of the audio questions. Granted I know they are the minority but might get annoying having to take out and put back in plugs
 
Don't really know how to feel. Studied hard and practice scores ranged from 251-260 on school administered CBSEs, NBME 15-18, and UWSA 1/2 (prior to change to 40 q's). I know on test day I made some great guesses but I also know I missed a good 15-20 questions total. A few were dumb mistakes that happen when you are exhausted and a few others were things I simply forgot. Is a 250+ out of the question now? I am sure I missed more than those 15 and it is probably closer to 30.
 
Don't really know how to feel. Studied hard and practice scores ranged from 251-260 on school administered CBSEs, NBME 15-18, and UWSA 1/2 (prior to change to 40 q's). I know on test day I made some great guesses but I also know I missed a good 15-20 questions total. A few were dumb mistakes that happen when you are exhausted and a few others were things I simply forgot. Is a 250+ out of the question now? I am sure I missed more than those 15 and it is probably closer to 30.

Dude, you're done, go have a drink!


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I'm wondering the same thing. I am taking it June 30th so not sure what "late june" means haha
I'm assuming you won't, but I really have no idea. 2 weeks seems too quick considering it's normally a 3-4 week wait. I'd say somewhere around early 20s would be the cutoff. Like I said though, random opinion with no value hahah
 
Don't really know how to feel. Studied hard and practice scores ranged from 251-260 on school administered CBSEs, NBME 15-18, and UWSA 1/2 (prior to change to 40 q's). I know on test day I made some great guesses but I also know I missed a good 15-20 questions total. A few were dumb mistakes that happen when you are exhausted and a few others were things I simply forgot. Is a 250+ out of the question now? I am sure I missed more than those 15 and it is probably closer to 30.

Bruh. Are you really getting worked up over that?
 
Well I just took this thing...

Idk...I feel like I'm in the absolute worst bottomless s**thole after taking this test. Had 32 questions last block, I know emotion is clouding my judgment atm but man, some of those questions were just pulled out of thin air. I don't feel like I could've done anything to prep for them.

There was some NBME 18 content rehashed, but easy stuff - none of the harder more involved questions. So this was nice to see, but not a score changer - as those are questions one would get right either way, basic stuff.

What can I say, Across every NBME available and UWSA I averaged in the 250's - this exam feels like a 220 at best.

Now to study for comlex...because testing us twice makes perfect sense.
 
Well I just took this thing...

Idk...I feel like I'm in the absolute worst bottomless s**thole after taking this test. Had 32 questions last block, I know emotion is clouding my judgment atm but man, some of those questions were just pulled out of thin air. I don't feel like I could've done anything to prep for them.

There was some NBME 18 content rehashed, but easy stuff - none of the harder more involved questions. So this was nice to see, but not a score changer - as those are questions one would get right either way, basic stuff.

What can I say, Across every NBME available and UWSA I averaged in the 250's - this exam feels like a 220 at best.

Now to study for comlex...because testing us twice makes perfect sense.

I took mine today too and am in the same situation. I averaged 250's for the past month across UWSAs and NBMEs, felt like I knew pathoma/FA/sketchy inside and out. Literally nothing could have prepared me for 15+ questions I saw today. I had never seen or heard of them

Trying to recover from that and study for COMLEX is going to be miserable
 
Well I just took this thing...

Idk...I feel like I'm in the absolute worst bottomless s**thole after taking this test. Had 32 questions last block, I know emotion is clouding my judgment atm but man, some of those questions were just pulled out of thin air. I don't feel like I could've done anything to prep for them.

There was some NBME 18 content rehashed, but easy stuff - none of the harder more involved questions. So this was nice to see, but not a score changer - as those are questions one would get right either way, basic stuff.

What can I say, Across every NBME available and UWSA I averaged in the 250's - this exam feels like a 220 at best.

Now to study for comlex...because testing us twice makes perfect sense.

I took mine today too and am in the same situation. I averaged 250's for the past month across UWSAs and NBMEs, felt like I knew pathoma/FA/sketchy inside and out. Literally nothing could have prepared me for 15+ questions I saw today. I had never seen or heard of them

Trying to recover from that and study for COMLEX is going to be miserable

I'll echo what these two warriors said. Took it today and I feel zero confidence after leaving the test center. I had at least 15 marked per block. Multiple questions per block were unneccssarily WTF. Best practice test was 245 and at this point I am just hoping I got above 200... Comlex in 4 days plzhelpme
 
Took the USMLE today and feel the exact same as you guys.....so much wtf in that exam. I distinctly remember two questions where the information provided on sketchy was useless for those organisms. Really hoping for a generous curve....like a UWSA1 type curve 😉. I have COMLEX on friday as well, time to go relearn my healing spells.
 
What do you guys mean by WTF questions? Like can you give examples (obv without giving actual questions). Like words or diseases you've never seen? Or like concepts and difficult problems?
 
What do you guys mean by WTF questions? Like can you give examples (obv without giving actual questions). Like words or diseases you've never seen? Or like concepts and difficult problems?
I had one disease with a list of possible gene mutations I have never seen in my life. I had another "what produces this substance" question I have never seen in my life. Then the anatomy was just stuff that was very in depth that I would have had to re learned Netters for, if that would have helped.

I recognized most of what they were asking, but that often didn't help me when there were two-three plausible answers.
 
Took mine today. Felt like there were maybe 1 or 2 "wtf" questions, but i was able to reason my way through them. My issue was that there was some guy hacking up a ****ing lung the entire test and it was difficult to pay attention
 
Took mine today. Felt like there were maybe 1 or 2 "wtf" questions, but i was able to reason my way through them. My issue was that there was some guy hacking up a ****ing lung the entire test and it was difficult to pay attention
The chick at the station next to me let out a monstrous fart. It was my sixth of seven sections. I was done after that.
 
Took mine today as well. Agree with everyone else have said. Practice tests were in the 230s but doesn't look like that's gonna happen after that beast. Hoping for a monster curve!

I had 28 questions on the last section. Anyone else from today have this?!
Did anyone else think micro was ridiculously hard?! NBME/uworld micro was nothing compared to what I thought the exam was asking!
 
Took mine today as well. Agree with everyone else have said. Practice tests were in the 230s but doesn't look like that's gonna happen after that beast. Hoping for a monster curve!

I had 28 questions on the last section. Anyone else from today have this?!
Did anyone else think micro was ridiculously hard?! NBME/uworld micro was nothing compared to what I thought the exam was asking!
Hah. Yeah, I definitely had a micro question or two that left me scratching my head... But I can't be too mad because Sketchy did a damn good job preparing me otherwise. 👍
 
What do you guys mean by WTF questions? Like can you give examples (obv without giving actual questions). Like words or diseases you've never seen? Or like concepts and difficult problems?

The ones that stick out the most were ones that involved asking how to treat commonly hit on pathogens in sketchy, but none of the drugs they taught in sketchy were options, or even in the same class of drug, made guessing challenging.
 
Took mine today as well. Agree with everyone else have said. Practice tests were in the 230s but doesn't look like that's gonna happen after that beast. Hoping for a monster curve!

I had 28 questions on the last section. Anyone else from today have this?!
Did anyone else think micro was ridiculously hard?! NBME/uworld micro was nothing compared to what I thought the exam was asking!

36 in my last section.
 
Yea I had high hopes of a 260 too, until I started doing those question blocks. Constantly on the defensive. Although I'll say this, the time flew by for me. I expected a long day with fatigue, but I felt pretty sharp the entire test. Just not sharp enough to confidently progress through the exam.

I had like 10-15 min at the end of most blocks, and then went back to review. Used every break. In hindsight, I feel like I knew a lot of questions, but there was a good handful that constantly kept tripping me up, even content that I thought I had down cold.
 
Yea I had high hopes of a 260 too, until I started doing those question blocks. Constantly on the defensive. Although I'll say this, the time flew by for me. I expected a long day with fatigue, but I felt pretty sharp the entire test. Just not sharp enough to confidently progress through the exam.

I had like 10-15 min at the end of most blocks, and then went back to review. Used every break. In hindsight, I feel like I knew a lot of questions, but there was a good handful that constantly kept tripping me up, even content that I thought I had down cold.

Yeah there's 3 distinct stages in my opinion.

Stage 1: first 2 blocks = OMG this is really it we have to do this right now and we are screwed. Damn damn damn here's an easy question but let me spend 2 minutes on it just to be safe because this is the real deal

Stage 2: middle 3 blocks = alrightttttt we're in deep now let's keep gettin it. Crazy hard question over some of the most random anatomy I know I never even saw during my anatomy course? Save it for the end and guess with 14 seconds left

Stage 3: last 2 blocks = damn I've only got 2/7 of the test left. How badly did I screw myself over the first 5 blocks? Do I have to get every remaining question correct to salvage this test? I have to get every remaining question correct to salvage this test.

Bonus Stage 4: post-test until I find out results = welp I guess i might have to retake this thing. Why can't they at least tell you upon submission if you probably passed or failed? That's definitely a thing there's no reason for them to not be able to do. I guess they just want us to hate life for a month. Hey I randomly remembered this easy question, lets look it up; wtf I choked on an easy question 😡 I needed to get all the gimmes right to have any hope 🙁 oh hey now I remembered some absolutely preposterous question that nobody could ever know. Let's look that one up; "spends 2 hours looking up info because the actual question is so stupidly difficult that not even the Internet has readily discoverable answers"; wtf I actually got that right?!?! I might actually get a 250+ after all.

This hopefully-slightly-comedic-yet-very-accurate post brought to you by wine, which is a thing you can finally drink again when Step is done ruining your life.
 
Lol it's funny that you just wrote that actually. I'm in the process of slitting my wrists after realizing I f**cked up mannose and maltose....ugh I can't live with myself right now. What a freebee! Aaaaaaaaaand ITS GONE.

Just punch me now
 
Hey guys, I wanted an advice. I am going to start UW from today. I am sitting on last of October. I was thinking i shall do UW very well, so i have kept 2 months for this. I want to do random, but not more than 2 or 3 subjects at one time. Anyone have any advice for me on this? Thanks 🙂
 
Congrats to those on here who are DONE!

drhousemd77051 I am projecting to take the exam in Oct. also. I was wondering if I'd find others on here who are in pre-dedicated or just entering their dedicated study phase! Good luck to us these next coming months!

Currently: going through Rx / Kaplan banks, Cardiology questions only (switched from Becker per advice of AnalisCanalis). Just finished GIT last week.
Planning to hit Uworld (Random) by end of July.

drhousemd77051 - so you're starting UW now? Have you done questions before or will this be your first exposure to question blocks?
 
@drhousemd77051 @SOML
Hey guys, I'm in a similar situation. Just finishing up RX and first pass of FA. Will be starting UWorld in July. Exam is in November. But my plan is a bit different. I am aiming to do 2 passes of UWorld. First pass I'll be doing system wise with thorough review over a period of 3-4 months, using it as a learning source. Then in the last 2-3 weeks before exam I'll do a second pass completely random and 4-6 blocks per day to build stamina and pick up any remaining points plus strengthening the high yield info.
 
Congrats to those on here who are DONE!

drhousemd77051 I am projecting to take the exam in Oct. also. I was wondering if I'd find others on here who are in pre-dedicated or just entering their dedicated study phase! Good luck to us these next coming months!

Currently: going through Rx / Kaplan banks, Cardiology questions only (switched from Becker per advice of AnalisCanalis). Just finished GIT last week.
Planning to hit Uworld (Random) by end of July.

drhousemd77051 - so you're starting UW now? Have you done questions before or will this be your first exposure to question blocks?

@drhousemd77051 @SOML
Hey guys, I'm in a similar situation. Just finishing up RX and first pass of FA. Will be starting UWorld in July. Exam is in November. But my plan is a bit different. I am aiming to do 2 passes of UWorld. First pass I'll be doing system wise with thorough review over a period of 3-4 months, using it as a learning source. Then in the last 2-3 weeks before exam I'll do a second pass completely random and 4-6 blocks per day to build stamina and pick up any remaining points plus strengthening the high yield info.

@SOML @Reperfused I did some 300 qs of uw before. But at that time i wasn't much focused on UW. I was doing those along with Kaplan LN. Now i'll only do UW. I have plans to do one more qbank on Aug/Sep, though i'm not sure which one to do, Kaplan or Rx. Here i see a good number of people like Rx. I was thinking to do the Kaplan qbank. After that i plan to do only FA for 20 days. Then do UW another time like what @Reperfused is planning to do along with FA revise. As we are planning to sit the test close to november or october, We can keep in touch.
 
Yeah there's 3 distinct stages in my opinion.

Stage 1: first 2 blocks = OMG this is really it we have to do this right now and we are screwed. Damn damn damn here's an easy question but let me spend 2 minutes on it just to be safe because this is the real deal

Stage 2: middle 3 blocks = alrightttttt we're in deep now let's keep gettin it. Crazy hard question over some of the most random anatomy I know I never even saw during my anatomy course? Save it for the end and guess with 14 seconds left

Stage 3: last 2 blocks = damn I've only got 2/7 of the test left. How badly did I screw myself over the first 5 blocks? Do I have to get every remaining question correct to salvage this test? I have to get every remaining question correct to salvage this test.

Bonus Stage 4: post-test until I find out results = welp I guess i might have to retake this thing. Why can't they at least tell you upon submission if you probably passed or failed? That's definitely a thing there's no reason for them to not be able to do. I guess they just want us to hate life for a month. Hey I randomly remembered this easy question, lets look it up; wtf I choked on an easy question 😡 I needed to get all the gimmes right to have any hope 🙁 oh hey now I remembered some absolutely preposterous question that nobody could ever know. Let's look that one up; "spends 2 hours looking up info because the actual question is so stupidly difficult that not even the Internet has readily discoverable answers"; wtf I actually got that right?!?! I might actually get a 250+ after all.

This hopefully-slightly-comedic-yet-very-accurate post brought to you by wine, which is a thing you can finally drink again when Step is done ruining your life.

Wait, you people remember the last 2 blocks?
 
Took mine today as well. Agree with everyone else have said. Practice tests were in the 230s but doesn't look like that's gonna happen after that beast. Hoping for a monster curve!

I had 28 questions on the last section. Anyone else from today have this?!
Did anyone else think micro was ridiculously hard?! NBME/uworld micro was nothing compared to what I thought the exam was asking!

I feel like mine really hammered in the parasites. I had maybe a few bacteria/virus questions and a lot of parasites and worms. Almost like they knew it was the only area that sketchymicro didn't do as good a job on.
 
@SOML @Reperfused I did some 300 qs of uw before. But at that time i wasn't much focused on UW. I was doing those along with Kaplan LN. Now i'll only do UW. I have plans to do one more qbank on Aug/Sep, though i'm not sure which one to do, Kaplan or Rx. Here i see a good number of people like Rx. I was thinking to do the Kaplan qbank. After that i plan to do only FA for 20 days. Then do UW another time like what @Reperfused is planning to do along with FA revise. As we are planning to sit the test close to november or october, We can keep in touch.

Hey guys, I think we're all covering the same material, just different order. Right now, I'm going through Rx and Kaplan banks- By organ. What I do is do an Rx block, review it, then hit a Kaplan bank and review that. I alternate back and forth until all the organ q's for each bank are exhausted. I find this helpful since information overlaps (i.e. concepts covered in a block of Rx are yet to be tested in Kaplan and vice-versa). In the end of an organ, I like to watch block % steadily increase as I get more info under my belt. I started with GIT (I perceive most difficult for me), and now I'm onto cardio. I plan to hit UW on random, by July.
 
I apologize if this has been addressed previously but 39 pages is a daunting task. I sit for this beast on friday and was wondering how breaks work. So it gives you the option after each section and then what? Do you have to raise your hand and get the prometric people to come check you out or what? Then fingerprinted back in and start again?
 
I apologize if this has been addressed previously but 39 pages is a daunting task. I sit for this beast on friday and was wondering how breaks work. So it gives you the option after each section and then what? Do you have to raise your hand and get the prometric people to come check you out or what? Then fingerprinted back in and start again?
You start with an hour of break time (minus up to fifteen minute for the tutorial). If you finish a section early, your remaining time adds on to your break time. You have the option for a break after every section. You walk out of the room and sign out at the desk, which usually just outside the testing room door. You can do whatever you want during break, including leaving the testing center. After you're done with the break, you have to sign back in, get wanded, turn out your pockets, and all that. Rinse and repeat.

Basically your tutorial time (0 to 15min) seven blocks (up to 60min each), and break (8hrs - tutorial - 7*(average block time)) will always add up to 8 hours.

Hopefully that's clear!
 
Took the exam yesterday. Felt like I was making great progress in reducing my dumb mistakes the last 2 weeks leading up to my exam with my last 4 NBME's (13, 15, 16, 17) and UWSA's average in the 260's. Then on the actual exam, I caved and second guessed several of my answers and ended up making really dumb mistakes. :barf:

Overall, felt terrible coming out of the exam, not cause I didn't know some stuff - that's happens to everyone with those WTF questions, but because I got wrong several questions that I definitely shouldn't have gotten wrong and that vast majority of people definitely got right. (lol those "84% got this correct" and I picked the "2% of people chose this") Unfortunately, I'm pretty sure that's what makes the difference in top scores - not getting the wtf's right but making sure you get right what you can get right.

I know a lot of people report a similar feeling and they say trust your NBME average lol but I sincerely hope I stay within 20 of my NBME average and if I do, I'll definitely be happy. At least now I get to start 3rd year clinic!

Couple of comments:
  • I did 3 Full length tests in the week leading up to my exam (NBME + either UWSA or Free 120) to help "build endurance" as I did the same thing to prep for the MCAT. Not sure it actually did anything except take away valuable study time during my last week so if anyone is planning on doing that, I would suggest just doing it once to get your routine down in terms of what food you want to eat and if you need a redbull after 6+ hours of test taking. If you're studying 10-12 hours a day anyways, the endurance part is already there.
  • Definitely review sketchy everything (including pharm) - there were some dumb mistakes I made cause I didn't make it a priority to review those one last time
  • I thought the exam was much more similar to UWSA's and the Free 120 rather than the NBME although there were definitely a good amount of straightforward old NBME style questions aka a few sentences with straight forward facts. One of my actual questions was taken directly from the Free 120
  • Oh by the way, did I mention review sketchy everything including pharm lol
  • Good luck to everyone else taking it! I'll report back later once I get my actual score back. :scared:
 
Hey guys, I think we're all covering the same material, just different order. Right now, I'm going through Rx and Kaplan banks- By organ. What I do is do an Rx block, review it, then hit a Kaplan bank and review that. I alternate back and forth until all the organ q's for each bank are exhausted. I find this helpful since information overlaps (i.e. concepts covered in a block of Rx are yet to be tested in Kaplan and vice-versa). In the end of an organ, I like to watch block % steadily increase as I get more info under my belt. I started with GIT (I perceive most difficult for me), and now I'm onto cardio. I plan to hit UW on random, by July.
I hope i shall be able to finish UW in my planned time, so that i have nough time to do those 2 qbanks. I am doing UW subject wise. Doing uw qs first, then before reading the explanation from the UW, i read from FA, then go through UW, though it takes time. But i think this also ensures that i shall complete FA once along with UW. I'm doing Cardio path. I somehow want to do pathoma videos for one more time, everyone in their experience saying they should have gone through the pathoma vids for one more time. Oh sketchy vids left too.
 
Apologies in advance for the long post. I'm a long-time lurker and this is my first post ever. I decided to post because I just took the exam on Monday June 13 and I wanted to share my experiences because some of the recent comments have really helped me...recover. Lol. So I wanted to make my contribution so that others can be comforted by my experience and know that they're not alone in feeling awful after the exam.

As background: I did very well in my classes all year and had been scoring highly on UWorld, NBMEs, etc. Finished UWorld (first and only pass) with an 86% random. My most recent NBMEs and UWSAs were in the range of 260-275. I therefore felt decently confident in my abilities to get a score that would make it reasonable for me to match into the specialty I am currently interested in (one of the most competitive ones). I felt that even if I "dropped" a little bit on the day of the exam, I could still pull out >245 (which would itself be a significant drop from my NBMEs predicted).

I had a terrible exam experience. The night before my exam, I had a massive fight with my significant other. That plus the impending exam made it so that I didn't sleep a wink the night before. When people generally say they "didn't get any sleep the night before," they generally mean like one or two hours. No. I literally did not get a single second of sleep.

The morning of, I was obviously freaked out. How in the world was I going to take STEP FREAKING ONE on an all nighter? I considered canceling my exam, but in the end decided I had to take the exam for the following reasons. 1) I had to take my exam before the start of third year, which is very soon, so there was not a huge window of time in which it would have been even possible to reschedule. 2) Even if I wanted to reschedule, it would have likely been a struggle to find one in a location at the last minute that I could get to easily and that process would have just made my life even more complicated. 3) The morning of, I searched frantically on SDN whether anyone else had ever taken the exam on no sleep and whether they felt it significantly impacted their abilities. I saw quite a few posts with stories about similar experiences and almost everyone said that they didn't feel tired during the exam because of the adrenaline even though they got no sleep. 4) I realized that I indeed didn't feel tired at all (I was wide awake) and that I should just got ahead and take it because any other option would just make my life so complicated and also I had no guarantees that it wouldn't happen again. Like, even if I were lucky enough to reschedule it for the following day, what if the same thing happened again? I think that when you pull an isolated all nighter you can feel OKAY the following day but two days in a row is not the same...

The exam itself was so demoralizing. When people say that they found Step 1 easier than UWorld, etc., I can't for the life of me begin to comprehend how. My test was a good 3-4x harder than any NBME I ever did, way harder than UWorld in general, and just had soooooo much stuff I straight up had no clue about. For reference, given my NBME and UWorld scores, I wasn't missing very many questions on those, and even the questions I missed, almost all of them were things that I've at least seen before and I just didn't fully understand the topic and had more to learn. On the real thing, however, there were countless questions where I was just like...what???? I think on each section I marked 10-20 questions and I'm sure I missed a large percentage of them. When I think about how harsh the curve is on NBMEs, I am just gutted by my performance. I easily could have missed 50 questions.

When I got out of the exam, I cried in the parking lot for half an hour. It feels super unreal that Step is actually over with after working so hard for months and knowing that I potentially undid all of my hard work because I just couldn't perform. I know there are so many stories on SDN of feeling devastated walking out of the exam and then they end up score like >260 lol. But that isn't going to be me, I know. I am super disappointed in myself. No, it's not the end of the world if you don't end up with the score you want. However, it's always sad when you don't live up to what you have in your capabilities. That's how I feel right now. So if there's even more people out there feeling like this...YOU'RE NOT ALONE!!!

As for the question of whether my lack of sleep/emotional state affected me...I am going to say probably a little, but maybe not. I just wasn't at the top of my game and even though physically I was okay, mentally I was not. It could have potentially affected my performance a bit, but it also could not have made that much of a difference at all. I'm not sure. What I would corroborate is that you shouldn't be scared that you will fall asleep during the exam or something if you don't get any sleep the night before haha. Physically, I was actually SO wired from the adrenaline that I didn't feel drowsy even in the slightest.
 
So I took NBME 17 last Friday and scored a 228. My exam is Friday and I'm nervous. I feel like i know nothing. What is the likelihood of me failing with a 228 on my latest NBME. I literally don't care what i score as long as i pass. someone calm me down
 
So I took NBME 17 last Friday and scored a 228. My exam is Friday and I'm nervous. I feel like i know nothing. What is the likelihood of me failing with a 228 on my latest NBME. I literally don't care what i score as long as i pass. someone calm me down
It's almost impossible to fail with an NBME score like that.
Good luck.
 
Apologies in advance for the long post. I'm a long-time lurker and this is my first post ever. I decided to post because I just took the exam on Monday June 13 and I wanted to share my experiences because some of the recent comments have really helped me...recover. Lol. So I wanted to make my contribution so that others can be comforted by my experience and know that they're not alone in feeling awful after the exam.

As background: I did very well in my classes all year and had been scoring highly on UWorld, NBMEs, etc. Finished UWorld (first and only pass) with an 86% random. My most recent NBMEs and UWSAs were in the range of 260-275. I therefore felt decently confident in my abilities to get a score that would make it reasonable for me to match into the specialty I am currently interested in (one of the most competitive ones). I felt that even if I "dropped" a little bit on the day of the exam, I could still pull out >245 (which would itself be a significant drop from my NBMEs predicted).

I had a terrible exam experience. The night before my exam, I had a massive fight with my significant other. That plus the impending exam made it so that I didn't sleep a wink the night before. When people generally say they "didn't get any sleep the night before," they generally mean like one or two hours. No. I literally did not get a single second of sleep.

The morning of, I was obviously freaked out. How in the world was I going to take STEP FREAKING ONE on an all nighter? I considered canceling my exam, but in the end decided I had to take the exam for the following reasons. 1) I had to take my exam before the start of third year, which is very soon, so there was not a huge window of time in which it would have been even possible to reschedule. 2) Even if I wanted to reschedule, it would have likely been a struggle to find one in a location at the last minute that I could get to easily and that process would have just made my life even more complicated. 3) The morning of, I searched frantically on SDN whether anyone else had ever taken the exam on no sleep and whether they felt it significantly impacted their abilities. I saw quite a few posts with stories about similar experiences and almost everyone said that they didn't feel tired during the exam because of the adrenaline even though they got no sleep. 4) I realized that I indeed didn't feel tired at all (I was wide awake) and that I should just got ahead and take it because any other option would just make my life so complicated and also I had no guarantees that it wouldn't happen again. Like, even if I were lucky enough to reschedule it for the following day, what if the same thing happened again? I think that when you pull an isolated all nighter you can feel OKAY the following day but two days in a row is not the same...

The exam itself was so demoralizing. When people say that they found Step 1 easier than UWorld, etc., I can't for the life of me begin to comprehend how. My test was a good 3-4x harder than any NBME I ever did, way harder than UWorld in general, and just had soooooo much stuff I straight up had no clue about. For reference, given my NBME and UWorld scores, I wasn't missing very many questions on those, and even the questions I missed, almost all of them were things that I've at least seen before and I just didn't fully understand the topic and had more to learn. On the real thing, however, there were countless questions where I was just like...what???? I think on each section I marked 10-20 questions and I'm sure I missed a large percentage of them. When I think about how harsh the curve is on NBMEs, I am just gutted by my performance. I easily could have missed 50 questions.

When I got out of the exam, I cried in the parking lot for half an hour. It feels super unreal that Step is actually over with after working so hard for months and knowing that I potentially undid all of my hard work because I just couldn't perform. I know there are so many stories on SDN of feeling devastated walking out of the exam and then they end up score like >260 lol. But that isn't going to be me, I know. I am super disappointed in myself. No, it's not the end of the world if you don't end up with the score you want. However, it's always sad when you don't live up to what you have in your capabilities. That's how I feel right now. So if there's even more people out there feeling like this...YOU'RE NOT ALONE!!!

As for the question of whether my lack of sleep/emotional state affected me...I am going to say probably a little, but maybe not. I just wasn't at the top of my game and even though physically I was okay, mentally I was not. It could have potentially affected my performance a bit, but it also could not have made that much of a difference at all. I'm not sure. What I would corroborate is that you shouldn't be scared that you will fall asleep during the exam or something if you don't get any sleep the night before haha. Physically, I was actually SO wired from the adrenaline that I didn't feel drowsy even in the slightest.

Hey man, that sounds like an awful time and I completely sympathize with the feeling of worthlessness and "wasted effort". I took the exam yesterday as well, and sat up until 2 AM dwelling over all the crap that gave me a hard time, it eats away at you - especially when you know you missed questions that in any other state of mind you would've answered without a problem. It wasn't a fund of knowledge problem, it was some kind of nervous-driven brain glitch that costs you easy points. The thought of that is absolutely heart ripping, considering the 18 hour days of studying leading up to it, just to get a stupid first order question wrong.

But..given a good track record like that, we'll just have to wait and see, and trust that there were a lot of questions that WERE answered correctly. There's really nothing else we can do about it now.
 
I took the test on Monday. I was scoring pretty well in UWorld (70-80s) and I got well in the 240s on my one and only UWSA. The last week before I tried to squeeze in another quick pass through FA, which I wish I spent instead doing the second UWSA and more NBMEs. The test I thought was a monster. I went in confident, scared and anxious, but confident. First block went ok. Second block I needed to pee really bad and took a quick break. Came back feeling exhausted mentally, got distracted mentally, got my composure back, started the block, and BOOM. First question I was like "what the **** is this?" That's when it all went downhill and I started second guessing myself and having ridiculous anxiety.

Pharm was simple as was micro. Those two were easily my best subjects before prep. I thought the question style was definitely more NBME than UWorld, as were the answers. The depth was pretty... pretty detailed. Definitely more than Uworld in my opinion. I reasoned through some, but like one of the other posters said I thought I was guessing. I thought I could get my score into the 250s in the week before, but now I"m genuinely hoping I even passed and am hoping I got in the 220s or 230s if I'm even lucky. Who knows. I just know I got annhilated. Stress and more than anything anxiety had a lot to do with it.

My advice to anybody reading this thread, if you have bad anxiety, GET IT TREATED. I tried, I wish I tried harder but I ran out of time and medical insurance. Please get it fixed. I'm absolutely confident if I didn't start hyperventilating I would've left feeling way more calm and better than me in there second guessing, looking around every 10s at the smallest of noises, biting the already bleeding skin off of my fingers. Good luck to all. It's a monster, but it's one that can be tamed if you can tame your own emotions.

I spent the past few days crying and I'm even still crying. Good luck all.

Also took it on monday and felt the same. I was so nauseous during the exam just from the anxiety. It didn't help that there was someone next to me tapping on the desk. It made me want to snap their neck!!!
 
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