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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Got my score today..Special thanks to all SDN fellows as I learned so much from all of you!! I'm going to share a brief review of my NBMEs and UWSA:

NBME 12(offline): 163/200 ( 3.5 months out, before Uworld)
UWSA 1: 263 ( 1 month out after completing Uworld and 2nd read of FA)
back to back UWSA 2 + NBME 13(offline): 263 / 186/200, 2 weeks out)
back to back NBME 17 + NBME 16: 256 / 260
Real Deal: 257

My exam was more like Uworld than NBME type, question stem were longer than Uworld and I didnt manage time well due to overthinking. I delayed my exam 3 weeks thinking it will help me but actually it didnt, I was just getting frustrated and drained and wanted it to get over. After the exam I wasnt sure how I did but I wasnt devastated, just glad that its over. Best of luck to everyone!!

Haha same score as me! Congrats!
 
I've been lurking here for some time in awe of the performances of many of you. Just got my score back: 251! The advice on this thread is invaluable--and never doubt your abilities!

Congrats on the great score! Do you mind writing what sources you used and your practice NBMEs/when you took them?


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app
 
😛🙂Joining this thread is a bit scary but I know can't lurk forever...ahem ahem, hello everyone

I completed my basic Med program last December (16 months/ 4 semesters) but before that I took the CBSE after my 3rd semester (before doing sytems pathology and pharmacology) just to see how I was coming along, score: 67%/192. After completing my 4th semester in December, I took about out 18 days (the time I had left before my qbank expired) at the beginning of January and went through Uworld sort of thoroughly and re-took the NBMe/CBSE I believe it's called and scored an 84/235, two days before that I did the UWSA1, scored a 242. However between that time and my next NBME (form 11) I moved to the US and after settling down I read the FA basic science principles for about a week and then took the NBME form 11 scoring a 230. Thus far it feels like my score keeps sinking lower but after finishing the Kaplan Qbank together with a proper first pass through the FA2016 and also FA organ systems I am really hoping to see some improvement because at this point I'm not sure what else I should be doing. I feel like my biggest problem is making the silliest mistakes (not reading the question properly, changing answers etc) and I hope doing tons of questions will cure me of that, I'd be glad for some advice on how to tackle that particular problem....

A bit more background for my future advice givers lol...while I was in basic Med I read the 'big textbooks', mostly either reading each chapter twice or reading two or more different textbooks for the same topic once with the exception of pathology (I could not bring myself to re-read Robbin's or Rubin's). I could read all this textbooks because I don't take notes while I read, I just read and reread. I don't have a photographic memory either lol...I wish.... Anyway, I did uworld questions randomly throughout 2015, they weren't really helping with actual school exams with the exceptions of micro and immunology. I didn't really start using FA until my 3rd semester in September and that was just for pathology because the professor was cray.... Also I never do my blocks in timed mode because I don't see time as an issue, I read fast and I usually have at least 20 minutes to spare per block in the NBME. I don't know if doing blocks in untimed tutor mode all the time has made me lazy because I feel like I don't think hard enough and just pick a random answer sometimes then read the explanation. Current plan is to start and finish RX after the Kaplan qbank and then do a second pass through uworld, of course rereading FA as many times as possible in the process.

My goal is a 260-270, I'm planning (for now) to do the exam at the end of June but I won't actually start the application process until after I do my next NBME next month when my 7-week Kaplan program is over and I would have finished the Kaplan qbank as well as FA organ systems. I feel like now would be a good time to receive some advice because I'm not sure I can take the disappointment of a low score on my next NBME. Technically I have unlimited prep time but I'd really rather get this over with😛

Thanks in advance!

One mooore thing, does anyone know if age is a factor when applying for residency? Like how old would y'all say you'd have to be to be taken seriously?
 
Hey @AshNiffler welcome to the thread ! Maybe you should give us a little more background to help you , like what do you mean finished 2 yrs of med school ? Did you do some of medschool somewhere and then left the country ? Did you finish the first 2 yrs of a US med school and then took a yr off? How are you gonna do the ''clinical'' part of med school? Is it even possible to do ''parts'' of med school in different uni's ?

AFAIK , the age stuff is mostly related to yrs after graduation , rather than absolute age .. i.e a PD would be scared to have a doc who got his degree 10 yrs ago , and then spent his time travelling , working at unrelated stuff etc etc , being responsible for pts in his department
 
Hey @AshNiffler welcome to the thread ! Maybe you should give us a little more background to help you , like what do you mean finished 2 yrs of med school ? Did you do some of medschool somewhere and then left the country ? Did you finish the first 2 yrs of a US med school and then took a yr off? How are you gonna do the ''clinical'' part of med school? Is it even possible to do ''parts'' of med school in different uni's ?

AFAIK , the age stuff is mostly related to yrs after graduation , rather than absolute age .. i.e a PD would be scared to have a doc who got his degree 10 yrs ago , and then spent his time travelling , working at unrelated stuff etc etc , being responsible for pts in his department

Is there anything you don't know big T?
 
Hey @AshNiffler welcome to the thread ! Maybe you should give us a little more background to help you , like what do you mean finished 2 yrs of med school ? Did you do some of medschool somewhere and then left the country ? Did you finish the first 2 yrs of a US med school and then took a yr off? How are you gonna do the ''clinical'' part of med school? Is it even possible to do ''parts'' of med school in different uni's ?

AFAIK , the age stuff is mostly related to yrs after graduation , rather than absolute age .. i.e a PD would be scared to have a doc who got his degree 10 yrs ago , and then spent his time travelling , working at unrelated stuff etc etc , being responsible for pts in his department

@tasar1898 thank you for the warm welcome, @Transposony lol what can I say? I was a content lurker...

I'm currently enrolled in a medical school in the Caribbean, the basic medical sciences portion of the program is done on the island in 16 months, divided into 4 semesters (Md1-anatomy, embryology and histology, md2-biochemistry, genetics epi and biostats and physiology, md3- basic pathology, microbiology and immunology, behavioural science and neuroscience then md4- systems pathology, pharmacology, ethics & physical diagnosis). Thereafter students are required to do a 5th semester with any review program although Kaplan is recommended, after which they can set up a date with the dean to take the CBSE, at least a 72% is required in order to be cleared to take the Step 1 by the school.

The clinical sciences program is based in Chicago with several hospitals with which the school is affiliated, after you get your step 1 score back you meet with the clinicals program director to arrange your rotations (what rotation you'd like to do, when you want to start and how heavy or light you'd like it to be etc). Rotations take about 6 semesters during which you are advised to take the Step 2 Cs & CK because passing them is required in order to graduate. So I'm still in the same university, just different locations 🙂

...any other questions?
 
@tasar1898 thank you for the warm welcome, @Transposony lol what can I say? I was a content lurker...

I'm currently enrolled in a medical school in the Caribbean, the basic medical sciences portion of the program is done on the island in 16 months, divided into 4 semesters (Md1-anatomy, embryology and histology, md2-biochemistry, genetics epi and biostats and physiology, md3- basic pathology, microbiology and immunology, behavioural science and neuroscience then md4- systems pathology, pharmacology, ethics & physical diagnosis). Thereafter students are required to do a 5th semester with any review program although Kaplan is recommended, after which they can set up a date with the dean to take the CBSE, at least a 72% is required in order to be cleared to take the Step 1 by the school.

The clinical sciences program is based in Chicago with several hospitals with which the school is affiliated, after you get your step 1 score back you meet with the clinicals program director to arrange your rotations (what rotation you'd like to do, when you want to start and how heavy or light you'd like it to be etc). Rotations take about 6 semesters during which you are advised to take the Step 2 Cs & CK because passing them is required in order to graduate. So I'm still in the same university, just different locations 🙂

...any other questions?

One last question.. Are you single? 😀
 
@AshNiffler Aha , it makes sense now 😛 . Anyways , it looks like you have a solid plan , in what aspect do you need advice specifically ?

Some general points.. In your place , I would focus on finishing the Kaplan course , while annotating anything that you think is important to your brand new 2016 FA and finishing the Kaplan qbank . Then I 'd do Uworld once more thoroughly ,i.e analyzing each q , why did I pick the right or wrong answer , whats the DDx blah blah + Critical reading of FA ( how X disease does Y ? ) + memorizing bugs /drugs of FA . Final 2-3 wks couple of NBME's and FA memorizing , then test day . Good luck !

p.s Have no personal experience with RX , but most ppl I ve talked to say that it's '' FA memorizing for ADD ppl '' so whatever suits you , if you can't sit down and read the book maybe it will help
 
@tvelocity514 @RadOnc250

Thank you for the kind words. Let me preface this by saying that my school changed its curriculum so that preclinical studies were shortened to 1.5 years, and we were given a 7-8 week study period beginning a week before Christmas. That said, I opted to start early with my Step 1 study by taking the summer between 1st year and 2nd year to review what I learned as an MS1. I gathered the majority of my materials (FA, Pathoma, USMLERx Qbank) shortly after starting summer research last May. My goal during the summer was 1) Review GI (most recent block completed at the time), 2) Focus on ONE broad topic -- I settled on Immunology since I enjoyed studying for it and knew I'd see it in my upcoming blocks for 2nd year 1st semester (MSK, Neuro, Repro/Endo). During my commute to research, I'd listen to 1 Goljan lecture. At night, I'd complete a block of 10-20 ?s in GI, Immuno, and whichever subject Goljan covered that day. I tried to stay on this schedule during the summer, but research was hectic and I'm not one to skimp on netflix time with my fiancee.

Resources used:
FA, Pathoma, USMLERx Qbank, UWorld (1 mo + 1 wk subscription), Lange Pharm flash cards, Goljan Audio + RR Path, Lippincott microbio flash cards, Clinical Microbiology Made Ridiculously Simple DIT.

UWorld Avg (1st pass) -- 75%
USMLERx Avg (75% complete) -- 71%

NBME Scores:
12/18 1st CBSE (administered by my school) - 195
01/19 NBME 13 -- 235
01/27 NBME 15 -- 230
02/10 NBME 16 -- 247
02/17 UWSA 2 -- 238
02/23 Real NBME -- 251

My study period was between 12/27-2/22.

12/29 - 01/16: 7-9am I started with a review of my pharm + microbio flashcards. I was able to get through 1 chapter of flashcards and finish by 9-930 am.
9am - 12pm --> Watch DIT videos. I was able to finish 6-8 videos before lunch. YMMV depending on how comfortable you are with the material before (I watched almost all of the videos on 1.75x speed since the lecturers speak at a snail's pace). Break at noon to call the fiancee and grab a bite to eat.
1-5pm --> Watch the rest of the DIT videos for that day. My goal was to finish 16 videos/day to complete the entire series in 2 weeks.
6-8pm --> Gym + Dinner. I listened to Goljan on the drive to the gym + while working out.
8-11pm --> Watch Pathoma, review FA. I probably watched more pathoma than review FA since DIT is essentially a thorough 1st pass of FA.

After rinsing + repeating for ~2 weeks, I started on UWorld. I completed 3 blocks/day, 1 hour to complete the block (timed, random, non-tutor mode) and took 1-2 hours to review my right + wrong answers. At the end of the day (~8 pm), I'd look at my notes regarding which concepts I struggled with most that day, and used Goljan RR, FA, Pathoma, and other resources to reinforce the material. Youtube has a number of informative videos that helped me understand physiology, embryology or anatomy related concepts (I found David West's videos on resp physio to be a big help, but there is no need to watch his entire series!)

After completing UWorld + reviewing Uworld tailored Anki flashcards, I took NBME 16. I was 13 days out and ready to take the test, but I opted to not move up my test date. I completed all of my wrong ?s on Uworld, half of my flagged ?s, then took UWSA2. The 238 was a wake up call for me, so I turned my attention back to USMLERx. I could not bear reading FA, so I found the USMLERx Qbank to be my go to by only taking 3-4 blocks of 44 med/hard questions up until the day before the test. The day before the test, I took one block of 44 USMLERx ?s, watched Pathoma, and read a few relevant FA pages (RR at the end, and the midbrain stroke section of Neuro FA)

On test day, I warmed up by going on a jog, reviewing flash cards, and completing 15 ?s on USMLERx. I walked into that test sky high with confidence, and left feeling like I at least broke 230.

Overall, I completed > 5000 unique questions before taking the real deal. I made a strong effort to complete 1000 questions before my dedicated studying period, which wasn't too daunting if you stick to completing a block of 10-20 daily. Also, I made a better attempt to familiarize myself with FA, pathoma, and USMLERx by using each resource as supplements to class material throughout MS2 1st semester.

I've left out some detail for brevity sake, but I hit most of my main points. I truly believe that Step is 50% content, 40-45% mental, and 5-10% luck. Don't skimp on your sanity! You need to believe you can score 250 < in order to achieve it! This is something that I think schools neglect, and I picked up from playing sports--visualize your success. I took time before every block to visualize myself getting every answer right, and scoring 100% on each block. I even changed my iPhone wall paper with a customized message of "thumbs up" and "smiley faces", and the "break 2__ !" Of course that never happened, but it did wonders to my confidence and was a game changer when I was hitting a wall during my study period. As tasar said, this test is doable!
 
One last question.. Are you single? 😀

LOL why do you ask? @walakin25 for the moment the first aid is my boo but you can be my side chick if you're like 21 years old or so:happy:

@tasar1898 Your input is appreciated! As for the kaplan course, I'm doing it out of obligation (and an F1 visa lol) not necessity, I'm barely in class or paying attention because I feel like I'm not learning anything new so its actually ******ing my studying process, by the time I get back from class I can only do a block of questions before hitting the gym and that's pretty much the end of my day, its a bit annoying actually. I wanted to know if there's anything else I could be doing to improve my score aside from reading the FA and qbanks. I'm doing as many qbanks as I can fit in before June because I learn by repetition, it's like how you read a novel, say Harry Potter, and remember everything that happened even though you weren't consciously trying to remember it, that's how I remember stuff, I just need to read and understand it. My biggest problem is the questions I get wrong, 95% of the time I already know the information necessary to answer the question but for some reason I just pick the wrong answer, it happens a lot when I do practice questions, its so stupid but I can't seem to help myself, do you know what I'm talking about? Or am I just cray🤔
 
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LOL why do you ask? @walakin25 for the moment the first aid is my boo but you can be my side chick if you're like 21 years old or so:happy:

@tasar1898 As for the kaplan course, I'm doing it out of obligation (and an F1 visa lol) not necessity, I'm barely in class or paying attention because I feel like I'm not learning anything new so its actually ******ing my studying process, by the time I get back from class I can only do a block of questions before hitting the gym and that's pretty much the end of my day, its a bit annoying actually. I wanted to know if there's anything else I could be doing to improve my score aside from reading the FA and qbanks. I'm doing as many qbanks as I can fit in before June because I learn by repetition, it's like how you read a novel, say Harry Potter, and remember everything that happened even though you weren't consciously trying to remember it, that's how I remember stuff, I just need to read and understand it. My biggest problem is the questions I get wrong, 95% of the time I already know the information necessary to answer the question but for some reason I just pick the wrong answer, it happens a lot when I do practice questions, its so stupid but I can't seem to help myself, do you know what I'm talking about? Or am I just cray🤔

Happens to me all the time. I usually do better changing my answers overall, but many of the answers I get wrong are ones I changed in the end. The double edged sword
 
One last question.. Are you single? 😀
Happens to me all the time. I usually do better changing my answers overall, but many of the answers I get wrong are ones I changed in the end. The double edged sword

@Qester more often than not my first answer is often right (the first answer I picked mentally and physically), also I've come to realize that if I spend more than a certain amount of time thinking about the answer to a question I'm likely to get it wrong. I'm hoping that by picking up on these little things that are eating away at my score I can do something about it but so far a solution hasn't presented itself... I'd be happier with getting a question wrong simply because I didn't know the answer in the first place
 
For those who took the test already - how does the break time work? is it like Kaplan where after every block, you have a timer that keeps track of how much time you have left of your 1 hr break and you can press "take a break" or "next block"?

How do you stop a gunner from pressing 'next block' when you're away on your break😏

Also did you socialize with the other med students lol
 
For those who took the test already - how does the break time work? is it like Kaplan where after every block, you have a timer that keeps track of how much time you have left of your 1 hr break and you can press "take a break" or "next block"?

How do you stop a gunner from pressing 'next block' when you're away on your break😏

Also did you socialize with the other med students lol

That's exactly what happens.

And every station is monitored so no one can screw with your computer. Also, everytime you come back from break you have to type in your ID.

Step 1 is like fight club. First rule of step 1 is to not talk about step 1.....so socializing is left up to sad glazes and nods of understanding.
 
finally three miserably LONG weeks later, guess its my turn to contribute ladies and gentlemen. this forum has been the best thing that's happened to me since I started studying for step 1 in September and I hope I can give even a fraction back of what its given me. I apologize in advance for the long post but it has been an incredibly emotional and exhilarating journey that I do need to share with everyone.


Background and Study History: IMG here, couple of years since I studied basic sciences and I was in the 2nd quartile of my class throughout med school. Having never worked hard for anything, step 1 was the first time I really worked towards something with serious dedication. I chose not to use the traditional kaplan LNs method that most IMGs follow (which is undoubtedly very effective if done properly) and instead rocked the American way, I UFAP-ED ALL THE WAY BABY (yeah I'm not too sure if thats a word but whatever). Started with reading FA cover to cover. In retrospect this was really dumb because reading FA is like reading a book in french, if you don't know the french alphabet, it'll just be a bunch of nonsensical gibberish just like reading FA, if you don't know your basic concepts, FA will be a bunch of gibberish and you will not grasp the zillion brilliant concepts packed into a 600ish page review book. So after this first read I had memorized some random stuff but I didn't truly understand anything so I bought RX and started solving the bank. This is where I made another mistake. What I should have done was used RX to engrain FA into my brain, however I straight up just solved RX qbank without referring to FA once (yeah I know what all of you are thinking, unbelievably stupid move, but I really had no idea what I was doing. I didn't join this wonderful forum till after finishing RX and as I'll explain later on, it was a game changer for me). RX helped me learn the material in FA better and I grasped some concepts here. I would type up well explained physiology concepts that I felt was important onto a word document and referred to it periodically. After finishing RX, I then purchased UW and started solving it. This time while solving questions I would have FA open, and I completed 70% of UW in Random/Tutor. Again I would type up notes into a word document or annotate notes into FA. I took my time reading all the explanations, it would take me approximately 5 hours to solve and review a block simultaneously. UW is an absolute golden qbank and everyone here already knows that. Around the same time I started UW, I discovered SDN. This forum is amazing man, an absolute gem. I spent a full day reading the 2015 step 1 experiences and scores thread and only then did I realize the importance of concepts, step 1 is all about concepts man. I started Googling anything I wanted to learn more about out of pure curiosity, SDN ignited the curiosity in me. I spent a lot of time on Google, on Wikipedia straight reading to enhance my depth of understanding.

At this point it was December and I was about 8 weeks out from my test date. The last 8 weeks I divided my time reading FA a third, final and comprehensive time, I did various NBMEs, I did UWSA1, and I spent an incredible amount of time on this forum. I was like a damn parasite man trying to extract all the knowledge I could from any post I deemed interesting. I was also sick for about two weeks which kinda messed up my studying for a period of time but in retrospect because I studied much less during this period, I was able to grind out the last 2-3 weeks.

When I first started studying in September, all I knew about step 1 was from a few friends of mine/ peers who had written it. They had told me 240 was the benchmark score, so arbitrarily I decided that my goal was a 240 or better. After 3 months of studying, when I started taking NBMEs and UWSA1, I started off eclipsing 240s and I realized that maybe, just maybe I could possibly do better than 240s. This was incredibly exciting because with each passing day, I felt that I could "erase" and forget about my years of mediocrity in medical school by achieving something spectacular on the step 1.

Materials Used: UFAP + Google/Wikipedia
FA (3x) Pathoma (2x)
Qbanks used: RX (79% 1x, random/tutor)
UW (76% 1x, 70% random/tutor, 30% random/timed)
Assessments: UWSA1 248 (~8 weeks out)
NBME 13 254 (~6 weeks out)
NBME 15 249 (~4 weeks out)
NBME 16 260 (~2 weeks out)
NBME 17 262 (~10 days out)
Free 137 94% (there's 137 qs people)
NBME Avg: 256

Exam Experience:
my short term memory is terrible. now this is advantageous when taking an exam like step 1 since like me you can rapidly forget about the previous block and then focus in on the next one which is very important folks, never let the previous blocks experience linger since you have 300 + questions to get through and you need to maintain a high level of focus throughout. However having a short term memory is terrible when you really want to be able to tell people what topics showed up but honestly can't remember (sorry folks). I just remember thinking each block I was marking more and more questions. I had a lot of ethics and biostatistics type questions which unfortunately was one of my main weaknesses. I probably had 3-4 questions per block. In my score report I was borderline for biostatistics/population health which disappoints me a little because had I answered a few more in this category, I probably would of hit 260.

Take Away: newsflash, step 1 is a thinking exam (you already knew that). the amount of recall questions probably varies per form or simply on your luck but I personally had very little. In other words, once or twice a block I confidently knew the answer because the question was testing a factoid, you either knew it or you didnt. UFAP is absolute gold. Understand every word of everything you encounter in these materials and I am confident all of you will be more than okay. Be curious folks, if you don't understand something, dont be frustrated but rather take it as a fun opportunity to explore something which you didnt know 5 minutes ago but now do. Im certain we would all rather screw up a question on a qbank than on test day and everything you read may be assessed in one way or another so dont lose focus while studying. No matter what your background, whether IMG or US Med student, all of you can do well on this exam with dedication, discipline, and curiosity. With honest time and effort, after completing step 1 you will inevitably have enhanced yourself as an individual. You are already on the path to a wonderful medical career and one way or another you will be a better you, I certainly feel that way. I will conclude this post by saying thank you to everyone on this step 1 forum, everyone who Ive messaged and took the time to reply back to me. Shout out to @tasar1898 for being one of the most helpful and active members of this thread and personally teaching me a crap ton, you a sensei to us all bro!

edit: your preparation and practice tests (NBMEs, UWSAs) give you a pretty good ballpark range of scores you will likely fall within, however it is what you bring on test day that will truly decide the final score.

Real Deal: >255 😉

@walakin25 brilliant post 🙂 It gives me some hope that my score really can go up from the 230 range because sometimes...well sometimes it's just frustrating when you're not moving as fast as you'd like. Looking back, how would you say Rx contributed to your overall prep? I'm planning to do that next after the Kaplan qbank. I've already done a first pass through uworld and I don't want to do it again too soon because I might end up answering from memory although the explanations are invaluable in themselves, I'd rather save it for the month I take my exam. I know it's been a while but congrats on your score!!
 
Got my score today: 237... got 8 points below my nbme average so thats disappointing but overall I think this is a great score and will leave me the ability to go in a higher tier program in whatever specialty i want (excluding derm and plastics and such of course haha)... overall really thankful i got this score but a little disappointed

Man it sucks when you score under your average, but a 237 is still a solid score, you should be proud
 
LOL why do you ask? @walakin25 for the moment the first aid is my boo but you can be my side chick if you're like 21 years old or so:happy:

@tasar1898 Your input is appreciated! As for the kaplan course, I'm doing it out of obligation (and an F1 visa lol) not necessity, I'm barely in class or paying attention because I feel like I'm not learning anything new so its actually ******ing my studying process, by the time I get back from class I can only do a block of questions before hitting the gym and that's pretty much the end of my day, its a bit annoying actually. I wanted to know if there's anything else I could be doing to improve my score aside from reading the FA and qbanks. I'm doing as many qbanks as I can fit in before June because I learn by repetition, it's like how you read a novel, say Harry Potter, and remember everything that happened even though you weren't consciously trying to remember it, that's how I remember stuff, I just need to read and understand it. My biggest problem is the questions I get wrong, 95% of the time I already know the information necessary to answer the question but for some reason I just pick the wrong answer, it happens a lot when I do practice questions, its so stupid but I can't seem to help myself, do you know what I'm talking about? Or am I just cray🤔

Your a makm
@walakin25 brilliant post 🙂 It gives me some hope that my score really can go up from the 230 range because sometimes...well sometimes it's just frustrating when you're not moving as fast as you'd like. Looking back, how would you say Rx contributed to your overall prep? I'm planning to do that next after the Kaplan qbank. I've already done a first pass through uworld and I don't want to do it again too soon because I might end up answering from memory although the explanations are invaluable in themselves, I'd rather save it for the month I take my exam. I know it's been a while but congrats on your score!!

RX was my first qbank after an initial blind read of FA not knowing much. RX helped me learn some concepts of FA. Take it as a tool to really hammer in the contents of FA and study hard, you can do it. Goodluck!
 
Man it sucks when you score under your average, but a 237 is still a solid score, you should be proud

Scoring a significant amount under recently taking NBMEs happens to some test takers. Damn... how do we avoid this ?


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app
 
As I've said earlier, I think the test was more "thinking" questions than "knowing" questions, so it took longer. In NBME 16, the only one I took, I just blasted through the blocks, and had ~20 minutes left after most of them. UWorld same, I ranged from 10-20 minutes left after each block.

On the real test I think it's worth it to put in the time per question, and really make sure you're thinking. I had two or even three "near-misses", where I almost put down one answer, but then realized it was another. Those, too, are the types of questions that never make it onto your "death count", but that you'll miss if you're not careful.

@herewe
Your a makm


RX was my first qbank after an initial blind read of FA not knowing much. RX helped me learn some concepts of FA. Take it as a tool to really hammer in the contents of FA and study hard, you can do it. Goodluck!

@walakin25 I'm a 'makm'? lol, ok thanks, hoping to post a jaw dropping score in the near-ish future🙂)
 
Studied for 7 weeks. Used UFAP method only.

15- 200 before any studying
16- 224 (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA1- 242 (3 weeks out)
UWSA2/13- 248/249 (2 weeks out)
17-256 & free 132-90% (1 week out)
Step 1- 249

Feel that perhaps I should've pushed a little harder my last week. Really went into chill mode thinking I was definitely getting above my goal. I suggest you don't lose gas or motivation last week and find something to keep you focused. Good luck everyone.


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app
 
Studied for 7 weeks. Used UFAP method only.

15- 200 before any studying
16- 224 (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA1- 242 (3 weeks out)
UWSA2/13- 248/249 (2 weeks out)
17-256 & free 132-90% (1 week out)
Step 1- 249

Feel that perhaps I should've pushed a little harder my last week. Really went into chill mode thinking I was definitely getting above my goal. I suggest you don't lose gas or motivation last week and find something to keep you focused. Good luck everyone.


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app

Was 15 before you did any uworld questions? What did you cover between 16 and uwsa1? Just more uworld Qs? When did you finally finish uworld?
Awesome score!! Congrats!!


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app
 
Was 15 before you did any uworld questions? What did you cover between 16 and uwsa1? Just more uworld Qs? When did you finally finish uworld?
Awesome score!! Congrats!!


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile app

15 was before any questions.

All I did differently was cover more material and do more questions.

I finished qbank about 3 weeks out and simply redid the ones I got wrong followed by a mix bag of everything.


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Hey everyone, got done with my exam yesterday and I got only three words: IT'S ALL HYPE!! Going into it, I expected the toughest exam I have ever taken to date, it wasn't close; I would equate the difficulty and topic contents to UWSA 1/2. The topics that were covered were all either covered in FA/UW/UWSA/ random class material from my preclinical years. I definitely came across 2 questions that I have never came across with any of my resources, but the others were just integrated cases of physio/biochem/molecular/path with the occasional anatomy that you have covered in the resources above. I'm ruing going through the high yield/goljian/BRS...texts, thought they were overkill. The only thing I was regretting coming out was that I was really pressed for time, and made really silly mistakes, you know the type where doing the next block you remember you had made the wrong choice in the previous block just because you hadn't the time to think it thoroughly, those types!! I guess I would add more about my prep after the results, but if there is anyone out there yet to take the exam and has covered/mastered UFAP/UWSAs, know you got it covered and go into it confidently, it's much ado about nothing!!!
 
Hay,, Anyone here recently took the test recently and took nbme 18 as well ? how the exam any close to 18 or any other NBMEs ??
 
Hey everyone, got done with my exam yesterday and I got only three words: IT'S ALL HYPE!! Going into it, I expected the toughest exam I have ever taken to date, it wasn't close; I would equate the difficulty and topic contents to UWSA 1/2. The topics that were covered were all either covered in FA/UW/UWSA/ random class material from my preclinical years. I definitely came across 2 questions that I have never came across with any of my resources, but the others were just integrated cases of physio/biochem/molecular/path with the occasional anatomy that you have covered in the resources above. I'm ruing going through the high yield/goljian/BRS...texts, thought they were overkill. The only thing I was regretting coming out was that I was really pressed for time, and made really silly mistakes, you know the type where doing the next block you remember you had made the wrong choice in the previous block just because you hadn't the time to think it thoroughly, those types!! I guess I would add more about my prep after the results, but if there is anyone out there yet to take the exam and has covered/mastered UFAP/UWSAs, know you got it covered and go into it confidently, it's much ado about nothing!!!
each test is different
perhaps your test was all hype.
 
Looking for some input from the masters (you guys)!

I start step 1 dedicated in ~1 months, and then will have about 10-12 weeks to study for it.
Current estimates based off Qbanks/NBME puts me around high 230s.

My end goal is a 250+ and if I score below a 240 I would be pretty upset in the end.
My question is how should I handle dedicated? I'm currently about 25% of my way through Rx/Kap and have done Pathoma/Goljan.

Yet I feel like there are glaring holes in my knowledge (Biochemistry, Physiology, Embryology, Pharmacology), where I have massive room for improvement.

When I start dedicated I was thinking of doing the 4 weeks to finish Rx/Kap, and do Kap LN+Videos for the above mentioned topics, then switching to UFAP for the last 8 weeks. Does this sound reasonable? What do you guys suggest?
 
Hey guys, I just wanted to get some feedback from you guys to see if I'm on the right track with my board prep. I'm doing the traditional UFAP + Sketchy approach and have been studying since January. I have gone through everything once (with the exception of UWorld~30% complete) and will be taking my exam in a little less than 3 months. At this point I have a 63% average in UWorld and was wondering if this is a decent score for being this far out? My goal is a 245... I definitely have a couple week areas which I want to focus on (Pharm/biochem) but I think I'll probably just work towards getting though FAP + sketchy 2 more times, finishing Uworld and hopefully going through it again. I guess I just wanted to get feedback from you guys to see how I'm progressing as I know a lot of you have already been though the process before and have better insight. Thanks in advance everyone! I really appreciate all your help and wisdom 🙂
 
@tvelocity514 @RadOnc250

Thank you for the kind words. Let me preface this by saying that my school changed its curriculum so that preclinical studies were shortened to 1.5 years, and we were given a 7-8 week study period beginning a week before Christmas. That said, I opted to start early with my Step 1 study by taking the summer between 1st year and 2nd year to review what I learned as an MS1. I gathered the majority of my materials (FA, Pathoma, USMLERx Qbank) shortly after starting summer research last May. My goal during the summer was 1) Review GI (most recent block completed at the time), 2) Focus on ONE broad topic -- I settled on Immunology since I enjoyed studying for it and knew I'd see it in my upcoming blocks for 2nd year 1st semester (MSK, Neuro, Repro/Endo). During my commute to research, I'd listen to 1 Goljan lecture. At night, I'd complete a block of 10-20 ?s in GI, Immuno, and whichever subject Goljan covered that day. I tried to stay on this schedule during the summer, but research was hectic and I'm not one to skimp on netflix time with my fiancee.

Resources used:
FA, Pathoma, USMLERx Qbank, UWorld (1 mo + 1 wk subscription), Lange Pharm flash cards, Goljan Audio + RR Path, Lippincott microbio flash cards, Clinical Microbiology Made Ridiculously Simple DIT.

UWorld Avg (1st pass) -- 75%
USMLERx Avg (75% complete) -- 71%

NBME Scores:
12/18 1st CBSE (administered by my school) - 195
01/19 NBME 13 -- 235
01/27 NBME 15 -- 230
02/10 NBME 16 -- 247
02/17 UWSA 2 -- 238
02/23 Real NBME -- 251

My study period was between 12/27-2/22.

12/29 - 01/16: 7-9am I started with a review of my pharm + microbio flashcards. I was able to get through 1 chapter of flashcards and finish by 9-930 am.
9am - 12pm --> Watch DIT videos. I was able to finish 6-8 videos before lunch. YMMV depending on how comfortable you are with the material before (I watched almost all of the videos on 1.75x speed since the lecturers speak at a snail's pace). Break at noon to call the fiancee and grab a bite to eat.
1-5pm --> Watch the rest of the DIT videos for that day. My goal was to finish 16 videos/day to complete the entire series in 2 weeks.
6-8pm --> Gym + Dinner. I listened to Goljan on the drive to the gym + while working out.
8-11pm --> Watch Pathoma, review FA. I probably watched more pathoma than review FA since DIT is essentially a thorough 1st pass of FA.

After rinsing + repeating for ~2 weeks, I started on UWorld. I completed 3 blocks/day, 1 hour to complete the block (timed, random, non-tutor mode) and took 1-2 hours to review my right + wrong answers. At the end of the day (~8 pm), I'd look at my notes regarding which concepts I struggled with most that day, and used Goljan RR, FA, Pathoma, and other resources to reinforce the material. Youtube has a number of informative videos that helped me understand physiology, embryology or anatomy related concepts (I found David West's videos on resp physio to be a big help, but there is no need to watch his entire series!)

After completing UWorld + reviewing Uworld tailored Anki flashcards, I took NBME 16. I was 13 days out and ready to take the test, but I opted to not move up my test date. I completed all of my wrong ?s on Uworld, half of my flagged ?s, then took UWSA2. The 238 was a wake up call for me, so I turned my attention back to USMLERx. I could not bear reading FA, so I found the USMLERx Qbank to be my go to by only taking 3-4 blocks of 44 med/hard questions up until the day before the test. The day before the test, I took one block of 44 USMLERx ?s, watched Pathoma, and read a few relevant FA pages (RR at the end, and the midbrain stroke section of Neuro FA)

On test day, I warmed up by going on a jog, reviewing flash cards, and completing 15 ?s on USMLERx. I walked into that test sky high with confidence, and left feeling like I at least broke 230.

Overall, I completed > 5000 unique questions before taking the real deal. I made a strong effort to complete 1000 questions before my dedicated studying period, which wasn't too daunting if you stick to completing a block of 10-20 daily. Also, I made a better attempt to familiarize myself with FA, pathoma, and USMLERx by using each resource as supplements to class material throughout MS2 1st semester.

I've left out some detail for brevity sake, but I hit most of my main points. I truly believe that Step is 50% content, 40-45% mental, and 5-10% luck. Don't skimp on your sanity! You need to believe you can score 250 < in order to achieve it! This is something that I think schools neglect, and I picked up from playing sports--visualize your success. I took time before every block to visualize myself getting every answer right, and scoring 100% on each block. I even changed my iPhone wall paper with a customized message of "thumbs up" and "smiley faces", and the "break 2__ !" Of course that never happened, but it did wonders to my confidence and was a game changer when I was hitting a wall during my study period. As tasar said, this test is doable!

What's the time interval between Uworld, Rx and your last NBME?
 
Just scheduled my exam for August. Feeling motivated! Most of all I'm just happy to have made it through the bureaucracy of ECFMG alive. What a complete load of bull****! Though, I suppose it just adds some extra motivation after all. At the moment I'm planning to set aside 8 weeks for my dedicated prep. Goal: >265. These are my baseline stats if anyone is interested:

NBME 11 - 251
USMLERx - 85%
Kaplan Qbank - 80% (25% completed)
Firecracker - 75% completed

Congrats to everyone posting great scores, keep 'em coming!
 
Just scheduled my exam for August. Feeling motivated! Most of all I'm just happy to have made it through the bureaucracy of ECFMG alive. What a complete load of bull****! Though, I suppose it just adds some extra motivation after all. At the moment I'm planning to set aside 8 weeks for my dedicated prep. Goal: >265. These are my baseline stats if anyone is interested:

NBME 11 - 251
USMLERx - 85%
Kaplan Qbank - 80% (25% completed)
Firecracker - 75% completed

Congrats to everyone posting great scores, keep 'em coming!
What has been your learning strategy till now?
 
Just scheduled my exam for August. Feeling motivated! Most of all I'm just happy to have made it through the bureaucracy of ECFMG alive. What a complete load of bull****! Though, I suppose it just adds some extra motivation after all. At the moment I'm planning to set aside 8 weeks for my dedicated prep. Goal: >265. These are my baseline stats if anyone is interested:

NBME 11 - 251
USMLERx - 85%
Kaplan Qbank - 80% (25% completed)
Firecracker - 75% completed

Congrats to everyone posting great scores, keep 'em coming!

When does your dedicated start? I'd be worried about peaking to early if I was already in the 250's, 5-6 months away from my exam
 
Just scheduled my exam for August. Feeling motivated! Most of all I'm just happy to have made it through the bureaucracy of ECFMG alive. What a complete load of bull****! Though, I suppose it just adds some extra motivation after all. At the moment I'm planning to set aside 8 weeks for my dedicated prep. Goal: >265. These are my baseline stats if anyone is interested:

NBME 11 - 251
USMLERx - 85%
Kaplan Qbank - 80% (25% completed)
Firecracker - 75% completed

Congrats to everyone posting great scores, keep 'em coming!
Solid stats ! Scheduled for August and Same Goal 😀 , though i havent taken an NBME yet, will do in May.
Kaplan Qbank- 77% (35% completed)

The questions that youre getting wrong, are they mostly due to deficiency in Concepts or Memory? And how many passes through UWorld do you plan on doing?
 
I always studied for class with Step 1 in mind. Started doing FC daily during first year, and it has clearly been instrumental to my learning. I've done a couple of passes through pathoma and FA too. Right now I'm in the middle of clinical rotations and haven't really had much time to study for Step 1 during 3rd year except for FC and an occasional block of Kaplan. I'm starting dedicated in June. UFAP is the plan (2x uworld).
 
My plan is to do Uworld 2x and to use Anki primarily. Since Brosencephalon's deck covers most of FA and Pathoma, I dont plan on reading those two cover to cover but instead to reference them as i plow through Uworld and Anki. Can anyone comment on the effectivity of my step 1 study plan?
 
Guys, need your opinion on best way to prepare for Microbiology. Planning to do CMMRS + FA + UW. 7 months for whole prep.

1) Should I also add Sketchymicro too?
2) And how long it will take to complete Sketchymicro first time?
3) Is it safe to skip Kaplan Microbiology completely?
4) What is ideal for Immunology?
 
Just scheduled my exam for August. Feeling motivated! Most of all I'm just happy to have made it through the bureaucracy of ECFMG alive.

Got the same sched as you, taking it in Aug with June as start of dedicated... yet I haven't handled any ECFMG stuff yet 😳. How long did the process take for you?
 
Hello guys, Im in need of some suggestions on what to do during the following 4 weeks before my test.
IM already done with Uworld, Rx, and Kaplan Qbanks
Uworld 69%
Rx 78%
My score progression
NBME13 198
NBME15 232
NBME 16 230
NBME 17 239
NBME 18 237

I really want to get >240 but according to my NBMEs it probably wont happen
Also, what about DIT videos and Becker qbank? Any of you have experience with these resources?
 
Hello guys, Im in need of some suggestions on what to do during the following 4 weeks before my test.
IM already done with Uworld, Rx, and Kaplan Qbanks
Uworld 69%
Rx 78%
My score progression
NBME13 198
NBME15 232
NBME 16 230
NBME 17 239
NBME 18 237

I really want to get >240 but according to my NBMEs it probably wont happen
Also, what about DIT videos and Becker qbank? Any of you have experience with these resources?


What helped u with that big jump in nbme 13 to 15??
 
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