USMLE Official 2017 Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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WeedForLunch

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I know this is quite early but most American Students have finished giving the test for this year.
I am an IMG and have been prepping for the steps since quite some time and have seen Phloston, Transposony's and others' threads for their respective years and how helpful they have been.

I intend on giving step in Jan.. let's share timetables, plans and other stuff on how everyone intends on taking on this beast.

P.S. : I think it is not that early.. the 2015/2016 threads were started in September/October.. but in true SDN gunner style..i wanna start it in August.. 🙂
 
You're ready. You can't know everything. Keep up with UWorld, but in the off time, just start nailing your weaknesses. In my last few days I wish I spent more time on them. I figured my test would be an even spread like the NBMEs and it wasn't. Had quite a bit of the stuff I should have looked over more, i.e. like genetics for me. Just flesh out some of the things your NBME/UWSA have told you you're weak on and you're good to go.
Thanks guys. It's nice to get some encouragement and to hear other med students say "it can't all be learned," I have to remind myself of that often because it seems like most med students I see/ hear from walk around like they memorized all of FA and have massive schlongs. Studying for boards is so isolating, I appreciate the advice! I'll report back here after my comlex is over (which is six days after my USMLE).
 
Thanks guys. It's nice to get some encouragement and to hear other med students say "it can't all be learned," I have to remind myself of that often because it seems like most med students I see/ hear from walk around like they memorized all of FA and have massive schlongs. Studying for boards is so isolating, I appreciate the advice! I'll report back here after my comlex is over (which is six days after my USMLE).

Not sure about the memorizing all of FA part...but


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Im a week out and I cant study. I dont know what to do... I've barely read a page of anything for the past 2 days.... Is this normal ??? What the F should I do.....Plz help!!!

For starters you can try calming down unless anxiety is helping you perform better. Im sure everybody on this forum has felt the same atleast a few days before the exam. Now would be a good time to review anything that makes you fee " bring it on, man" type about this exam. You got this man! A few days from
now, you'll be done!
 
Thanks guys. It's nice to get some encouragement and to hear other med students say "it can't all be learned," I have to remind myself of that often because it seems like most med students I see/ hear from walk around like they memorized all of FA and have massive schlongs. Studying for boards is so isolating, I appreciate the advice! I'll report back here after my comlex is over (which is six days after my USMLE).
Memorization of FA means little without a very solid foundation and good test taking ability. Ive seen this firsthand. In fact, i doubted myself incredibly in the days leading up to the exam bc a few of my friends knew everything in FA and i simply did not.

"Memorizing every word" in FA might be the most pervasive piece of advice out there with extremely variable results. Im sure the varying results can be explained by many things but it is fairly obvious that it is, in no way, a guarantee. More importantly, it is not for everyone. There have been 270s without touching FA and 190s who made 10 passes.
 
Im a week out and I cant study. I dont know what to do... I've barely read a page of anything for the past 2 days.... Is this normal ??? What the F should I do.....Plz help!!!
You could listen to pathoma or another resource on your phone while going out for a walk or another activity to help change the setting. It is usual to get burned out at the end.
 
Memorization of FA means little without a very solid foundation and good test taking ability. Ive seen this firsthand. In fact, i doubted myself incredibly in the days leading up to the exam bc a few of my friends knew everything in FA and i simply did not.

"Memorizing every word" in FA might be the most pervasive piece of advice out there with extremely variable results. Im sure the varying results can be explained by many things but it is fairly obvious that it is, in no way, a guarantee. More importantly, it is not for everyone. There have been 270s without touching FA and 190s who made 10 passes.
Any advice on how to improve anatomy? Like what resources should I read. And I'm doing my second pass of FA, I already did Pathoma once, but I was thinking on may be listening to the audios again or should I listen to Goljan audio?
anatomy is really low yield, just know what's in FA
 
But....but...permitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermitpermit......

.....permit.


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My permit is still there and I took it June 19th. This is a sure sign that I failed, right?

#permitpermit
 
OK everyone, if you still see PRINT PERMIT, you're ok. If you already sat for the Exam then when you click it, it should say something along the lines of "unavailable because student sat" or whatever. But once that "PRINT PERMIT" Blue button itself disappears (hopefully next week for some of us at 4 weeks out) then we should get scores wed. If it has disappeared already, it also means you're past your ELIGIBILITY PERIOD (that 3 month window you had picked when you registered for the STEP.

OK?! Everyone good? cool. If mine doesn't disappear and I still get my score on wed, ill post an update for future test takers.
 

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Guess I shoulda waited the 2 mins lol my thing officially changed.

So next week it is! *** the picture below is what the above pic was, but it literally just changed to this since my post****
 

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Just FYI people. I went back into the 2016 thread and it looks like people who took the test the week of the 19th were able to get their scores back by July 12th despite permit and 4th of July issues.


Haha, yesterday I also digged the 2015 and 2016 thread and it's true! 😀 I took the test on June 22. Let's hope we get our scores this Wednesday;D
 
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I haven't decided if I'm taking step yet, I plan to take nbme 19, then UWSA 1, then nbme 18, then UWSA 2 in the upcoming days and if I improve with those, then I'll take step. In the event that I do improve enough, like 215. Are there any "must study" or tips that people recommend? Other than everyone's test is different, so know it all, lol. I know that a while back people where saying that rereading Pathoma chapters 1-3 were high yield, bugs is harder so know the less common presentations, and try to do practice questions that have lots of arrows in them.
 
I haven't decided if I'm taking step yet, I plan to take nbme 19, then UWSA 1, then nbme 18, then UWSA 2 in the upcoming days and if I improve with those, then I'll take step. In the event that I do improve enough, like 215. Are there any "must study" or tips that people recommend? Other than everyone's test is different, so know it all, lol. I know that a while back people where saying that rereading Pathoma chapters 1-3 were high yield, bugs is harder so know the less common presentations, and try to do practice questions that have lots of arrows in them.
Definitely pathoma and rapid review of fa. They have page numbers now where you can look back
 
Definitely pathoma and rapid review of fa. They have page numbers now where you can look back

I honestly didn't think rapid review was helpful at all. The presentations are too "classic" and won't be anywhere near that easy on the exam. Might have helped me remember 1 or 2 presentations at most.
 
I haven't decided if I'm taking step yet, I plan to take nbme 19, then UWSA 1, then nbme 18, then UWSA 2 in the upcoming days and if I improve with those, then I'll take step. In the event that I do improve enough, like 215. Are there any "must study" or tips that people recommend? Other than everyone's test is different, so know it all, lol. I know that a while back people where saying that rereading Pathoma chapters 1-3 were high yield, bugs is harder so know the less common presentations, and try to do practice questions that have lots of arrows in them.
If you are looking to build confidence, then nbme 19 may not be the best one to take first as it has been reported to underscore compared to Step 1 by many. Search the forums for details.
 
If you are looking to build confidence, then nbme 19 may not be the best one to take first as it has been reported to underscore compared to Step 1 by many. Search the forums for details.

Yup, I've been doing my homework. I know the curve is harsh and to just add 10-15 points afterward. Mostly I would take that one too see what topics I was still weak in.
 
No lol. It's just ridiculous that the same question about something as trivial as a scheduling permit disappearing keeps coming up after people have answered it at least 5 times since I've been following this thread..
lool i found all the sarcastic comments hilarious. i just think ppl are so damn lost cus there isn't a visual aid to follow the convo, hence my further clarification.
 
lool i found all the sarcastic comments hilarious. i just think ppl are so damn lost cus there isn't a visual aid to follow the convo, hence my further clarification.

B-b-but MUH PERMIT

Honestly guys, I don't think there's enough discussion about permits in this thread. If you could post about permits a bit more, that would be great.

#permit
 
B-b-but MUH PERMIT

Honestly guys, I don't think there's enough discussion about permits in this thread. If you could post about permits a bit more, that would be great.

#permit
bless your heart, you know what, you're so right. Hold on while i post some more. in fact, can you draw me up a table about permits and when they disappeared starting from 2000. that way we get a good enough sample size. thank yah darlin.
 
General rules for everyone to follow from now on.

1) If you're not actively studying for step 1 or have already sat the test, DO NOT give any advise to other people on how to study. Some people are really looking for meaningful advise on this forum. Doing so will result in that user having to stand a trial by combat against The Mountain.
2) Talking about permits disappearing will result in that user being sent to the Knight's Watch.
3) People who are consistently scoring above 250 on practice tests that post here complaining about how they think they're gonna fail will be sent to a leper colony.
4) The curve on NBME 19 is ****. Your anxiety is a normal reaction, but don't let it take hold of you. Failure to do so will result in a visit from the many faced god.

Disclaimer: Game of Thrones is a fictional story and the characters mentioned in this thread are not real.
 
General rules for everyone to follow from now on.

1) If you're not actively studying for step 1 or have already sat the test, DO NOT give any advise to other people on how to study. Some people are really looking for meaningful advise on this forum. Doing so will result in that user having to stand a trial by combat against The Mountain.
2) Talking about permits disappearing will result in that user being sent to the Knight's Watch.
3) People who are consistently scoring above 250 on practice tests that post here complaining about how they think they're gonna fail will be sent to a leper colony.
4) The curve on NBME 19 is ****. Your anxiety is a normal reaction, but don't let it take hold of you. Failure to do so will result in a visit from the many faced god.

Disclaimer: Game of Thrones is a fictional story and the characters mentioned in this thread are not real.

Might as well shut down this thread then. That's about ~90% of the convos here.
 
I think the issue is that the NBME has literally released scores once in the last like 2.5 months so people are running out of things to discuss here lol so the paranoia and neuroticism takes over
 
Hi there! Insert giving-back-to-the-community comment here. But seriously, reading the success stories of others truly helped me achieve my goal, and I want to give back now.


Step 1 Score: 250


I will preface this with the following:

1. I attend a mid-tier medical school

2. I attended a very low-tier undergraduate institution, which did scare me when I started medical school because most of my colleagues are from great colleges.

3. My MCAT score was a 32, below average for my medical school entering class.


My Strategy

Goals

Identifying goals is really important so you know what you’re after. This should be done relatively early on, perhaps by the middle to end of MS1.


1. I was thinking about pursuing ophthalmology by the end of MS1, so my target goal score was 240+. Other specialties are still on the table for me, but this is the one that required a high score.

2. I have a girlfriend, so after 3PM on every Saturday I wanted to spend with her. We don’t see each other any other day given our schedules, so this was pre-determined blocked off time once MS2 started, and yes, even during dedicated.

3. I run a nonprofit in my spare time, so I wanted to prioritize that along with coursework and Step studying.


Summer after MS1

I spent about two weeks, couple hours a day, reading the renal and cardio sections of First Aid (just the anatomy and physiology sections), because I was weak on those. That’s it, nothing else. Enjoy the summer! (I did research abroad and chilled when I got back).


MS2

This is where plans may vary based on your school schedule/requirements. It took me about 1.5-2 months to come up with the plan below, since I was figuring out what resources worked best for me. My school doesn’t require attendance for most lectures, so I never showed up unless I had to (perhaps 2-3 lectures/week on average). No, I didn’t care to Honor courses because step 1 is 1000x more important. I only honored 3/7 courses MS2 as a result. The example below is for a day when I didn’t have class:



· 5:30-6AM: Wake up/shower/eat/contemplate life

· 6-8AM: Watch relevant Pathoma for today’s lecture content (I searched for the relevant cards in the Bro’s deck and transferred them into my active deck for the unit (so for instance, if I was learning about brain tumors that day I would search for all the cards associated with them in the bros deck and transfer them to my active Neurology deck; by the end of the unit, all the Bros cards should be in your active deck))

· 8:15-10AM: Watch podcasted lectures 2x speed, adding only salient information to my anki deck

· 10-12: Read First Aid for the relevant material (Since I used Bros, I usually didn’t need to add any new cards to the deck)

· 12-1: Lunch (Sometimes I’d drive over to the library for a change of atmosphere, sometimes I would already be there at 8AM.)

· 1-4: Bunch of Anki cards; 3 hours sounds like a lot but the cards really start to accumulate after a while when you’re in a unit (Also did Sketchy a lot)

· 4-5:00 Stuff for nonprofit, research, etc

· 5:00-5:30: Dinner

· 5:30-8: Review yesterday’s Uworld block (I didn’t’ like to review a block right after doing it, I liked reviewing it the next day). What I mean by review is add anki cards to my active deck for the unit from Uworld; took a hell of a long time, but while everyone else was only able to do 1-2 passes of Uworld, I did 4-5 passes for most of the material through anki. This set me apart from most people.

· 8-9: New Uworld block, usually 32 questions (75% of a full block). Usually timed and unit-specific, but as questions from previous units accumulated I added multiple previous blocks at once.

Fridays? Off after 6PM. Weekends? Much of the same as above, except Saturday at 3PM I was done regardless of how I felt so I could hang out with SO.


IMPORTANT POINTS:

1. Firstly, yes this is intense. But, again, I wanted to ensure a high score and really tone down the stress I’d have during dedicated.

2. Secondly, IT IS VERY IMPORTANT, that you spend time reviewing the anatomy and physiology sections of First Aid during the unit you are on. I usually spent about 2 days going through those sections at the beginning of a new unit, using the USMLERx videos and Bros deck. This is what separated me from everyone else. I was thus theoretically behind everyone else in class lectures, but it doesn’t matter since you are ahead for what matters.

3. Thirdly, don’t make your own anki cards for First Aid/Pathoma. I got misdirected by an upperclassman (who I later found was trying to make others look bad on rotations to make himself look good/honor) to make my own cards, and I stopped in January of MS2 and just did Bros. Looking back, I wish I had done Bros from the beginning; would have saved so much more time.


Dedicated (6 weeks, 3 days)

By the time dedicated rolled around, I had gone through everything in so much detail that I felt ready. The only things I hadn’t gone through were biochemistry and micro. I’d finished 70% of Uworld by the time dedicated started (about 71-72% average), with biochem and micro making up the majority of questions I hadn’t done yet. I reset the deck so that I could have a good mixture of questions. I cannot stress enough the importance of doing Uworld during MS2, I’d say this was the major reason I got the score I did.


I picked ONE classmate to study with, who has become a very close friend of mine. Too many people spoil the cooking. We followed an identical schedule every day; he had only done 10-20% of Uworld and did not read most of First Aid by the time dedicated rolled around, but it still worked out for him (he got mid 240s). Clearly, there are many ways to approach MS2 but I definitely felt less stressed during dedicated because of my strategy.


Typical study plan:

· 5:30-7AM: Anki (I usually did maybe like 20-30 cards from two different body systems; remember I already had pristine anki decks with Bros + Uworld combined for each body system)

· 7-8: Shower/eat/contemplate life/get to library to meet up with study partner

· 8-10: Two blocks Uworld, timed random

· 10:15-12: Review Uworld

· 12-1: Sketchy Micro/Pharm (I planned it out so that if I spent an hour a day I’d easily finish all of sketchy by my test)

· 3-8: Review one body system

· 8-9: Biochem (Bros is great for this)

· 9-10:30: Get home, relax, maybe a little anki


The basic strategy was to ensure that I went through each body system twice, at least. I spent about 1-2 days per body system and then moved on to another. I was fluid about it. If I needed to spend more time on cardio because I sucked on it for Uworld/NBMEs, I did that. Don’t be so rigid about the schedule in terms of new content you are trying to learn; you’ll find that your strengths and weaknesses change. Focus on the weaknesses without forgetting the strengths (anki is great for this).


Took one practice test at the start of dedicated, then one every Saturday. Saturday 8-whenever was the test, and then I was off the rest of the day and hung out with my girlfriend. Sunday I reviewed the test all day with my study partner and made a plan for the week in terms of what body systems I wanted to cover and specific topics within those.


Day 1 dedicated: UWSA1 = 245. I knew this overpredicted, but I was still happy.

End of Week 1: UWSA2 =239.

End of Week 2: NBME 13 = 230

End of Week 3: NBME 15 = 236

End of Week 4: NBME 16 = 236

End of Week 5: NBME 17 = 252 (felt like I, by luck, knew most of the material in this test)

End of Week 6: NBME 18 = 242.

Free 120 (3 days before): 86%

Day Before Test

Just reviewed high yield stuff like lymph drainage by 3pm. My girlfriend got me a massage package so I went to that and got a nice dinner after.


Test Day

I kept a routine for each practice test that I maintained for the real test. Peanut butter sandwich, apple, two granola bars, water, and coffee. Ear plugs with headphones over them.


The actual test felt okay, my feeling was that I was going to perform between NBME 17 and 18. The test was very similar to NBME 18, but my feeling immediately after was more like NBME 17. I marked about 50% of the questions (I am a liberal marker and I wasn’t worried about that, since I did the same for all my practice tests), and I didn’t have time on any block (except like 1 for 2 minutes) to review them (again, typical for me).


Breaks: I am a huge believer in deep breathing and staying calm, and it’s the reason I did well on test day:

After block 1: 5 minute deep breathing at desk

After block 2: Get up and eat a granola bar

After block 3: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 4: Lunch

After block 5: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 6: Went outside and walked around, I had a good amount of break left


I hope that this has helped some of you all figure out what your plans are for Step 1. It’s quite the journey, but my strategy worked well for me and, at least for the dedicated portion, my study partner as well. I never thought I’d score high enough to pursue my dreams, but now anything is possible!
 
How many questions do you think you missed on the real test to have made a 250?

It's hard to tell. On NBME 17, I got 93.5% correct to get the 252. My guess is that I got somewhere between 88-92% of the questions correct, but again NBME doesn't release the data so it's difficult to tell.

In terms of my score report, they give performance bars like they do for NBME. I got asterisks (higher than the scale could show) for 13/23 categories, but everything else except anatomy, MSK, and GI were extremely close to the end of the higher performance scale.
 
Hi there! Insert giving-back-to-the-community comment here. But seriously, reading the success stories of others truly helped me achieve my goal, and I want to give back now.


Step 1 Score: 250


I will preface this with the following:

1. I attend a mid-tier medical school

2. I attended a very low-tier undergraduate institution, which did scare me when I started medical school because most of my colleagues are from great colleges.

3. My MCAT score was a 32, below average for my medical school entering class.


My Strategy

Goals

Identifying goals is really important so you know what you’re after. This should be done relatively early on, perhaps by the middle to end of MS1.


1. I was thinking about pursuing ophthalmology by the end of MS1, so my target goal score was 240+. Other specialties are still on the table for me, but this is the one that required a high score.

2. I have a girlfriend, so after 3PM on every Saturday I wanted to spend with her. We don’t see each other any other day given our schedules, so this was pre-determined blocked off time once MS2 started, and yes, even during dedicated.

3. I run a nonprofit in my spare time, so I wanted to prioritize that along with coursework and Step studying.


Summer after MS1

I spent about two weeks, couple hours a day, reading the renal and cardio sections of First Aid (just the anatomy and physiology sections), because I was weak on those. That’s it, nothing else. Enjoy the summer! (I did research abroad and chilled when I got back).


MS2

This is where plans may vary based on your school schedule/requirements. It took me about 1.5-2 months to come up with the plan below, since I was figuring out what resources worked best for me. My school doesn’t require attendance for most lectures, so I never showed up unless I had to (perhaps 2-3 lectures/week on average). No, I didn’t care to Honor courses because step 1 is 1000x more important. I only honored 3/7 courses MS2 as a result. The example below is for a day when I didn’t have class:



· 5:30-6AM: Wake up/shower/eat/contemplate life

· 6-8AM: Watch relevant Pathoma for today’s lecture content (I searched for the relevant cards in the Bro’s deck and transferred them into my active deck for the unit (so for instance, if I was learning about brain tumors that day I would search for all the cards associated with them in the bros deck and transfer them to my active Neurology deck; by the end of the unit, all the Bros cards should be in your active deck))

· 8:15-10AM: Watch podcasted lectures 2x speed, adding only salient information to my anki deck

· 10-12: Read First Aid for the relevant material (Since I used Bros, I usually didn’t need to add any new cards to the deck)

· 12-1: Lunch (Sometimes I’d drive over to the library for a change of atmosphere, sometimes I would already be there at 8AM.)

· 1-4: Bunch of Anki cards; 3 hours sounds like a lot but the cards really start to accumulate after a while when you’re in a unit (Also did Sketchy a lot)

· 4-5:00 Stuff for nonprofit, research, etc

· 5:00-5:30: Dinner

· 5:30-8: Review yesterday’s Uworld block (I didn’t’ like to review a block right after doing it, I liked reviewing it the next day). What I mean by review is add anki cards to my active deck for the unit from Uworld; took a hell of a long time, but while everyone else was only able to do 1-2 passes of Uworld, I did 4-5 passes for most of the material through anki. This set me apart from most people.

· 8-9: New Uworld block, usually 32 questions (75% of a full block). Usually timed and unit-specific, but as questions from previous units accumulated I added multiple previous blocks at once.

Fridays? Off after 6PM. Weekends? Much of the same as above, except Saturday at 3PM I was done regardless of how I felt so I could hang out with SO.


IMPORTANT POINTS:

1. Firstly, yes this is intense. But, again, I wanted to ensure a high score and really tone down the stress I’d have during dedicated.

2. Secondly, IT IS VERY IMPORTANT, that you spend time reviewing the anatomy and physiology sections of First Aid during the unit you are on. I usually spent about 2 days going through those sections at the beginning of a new unit, using the USMLERx videos and Bros deck. This is what separated me from everyone else. I was thus theoretically behind everyone else in class lectures, but it doesn’t matter since you are ahead for what matters.

3. Thirdly, don’t make your own anki cards for First Aid/Pathoma. I got misdirected by an upperclassman (who I later found was trying to make others look bad on rotations to make himself look good/honor) to make my own cards, and I stopped in January of MS2 and just did Bros. Looking back, I wish I had done Bros from the beginning; would have saved so much more time.


Dedicated (6 weeks, 3 days)

By the time dedicated rolled around, I had gone through everything in so much detail that I felt ready. The only things I hadn’t gone through were biochemistry and micro. I’d finished 70% of Uworld by the time dedicated started (about 71-72% average), with biochem and micro making up the majority of questions I hadn’t done yet. I reset the deck so that I could have a good mixture of questions. I cannot stress enough the importance of doing Uworld during MS2, I’d say this was the major reason I got the score I did.


I picked ONE classmate to study with, who has become a very close friend of mine. Too many people spoil the cooking. We followed an identical schedule every day; he had only done 10-20% of Uworld and did not read most of First Aid by the time dedicated rolled around, but it still worked out for him (he got mid 240s). Clearly, there are many ways to approach MS2 but I definitely felt less stressed during dedicated because of my strategy.


Typical study plan:

· 5:30-7AM: Anki (I usually did maybe like 20-30 cards from two different body systems; remember I already had pristine anki decks with Bros + Uworld combined for each body system)

· 7-8: Shower/eat/contemplate life/get to library to meet up with study partner

· 8-10: Two blocks Uworld, timed random

· 10:15-12: Review Uworld

· 12-1: Sketchy Micro/Pharm (I planned it out so that if I spent an hour a day I’d easily finish all of sketchy by my test)

· 3-8: Review one body system

· 8-9: Biochem (Bros is great for this)

· 9-10:30: Get home, relax, maybe a little anki


The basic strategy was to ensure that I went through each body system twice, at least. I spent about 1-2 days per body system and then moved on to another. I was fluid about it. If I needed to spend more time on cardio because I sucked on it for Uworld/NBMEs, I did that. Don’t be so rigid about the schedule in terms of new content you are trying to learn; you’ll find that your strengths and weaknesses change. Focus on the weaknesses without forgetting the strengths (anki is great for this).


Took one practice test at the start of dedicated, then one every Saturday. Saturday 8-whenever was the test, and then I was off the rest of the day and hung out with my girlfriend. Sunday I reviewed the test all day with my study partner and made a plan for the week in terms of what body systems I wanted to cover and specific topics within those.


Day 1 dedicated: UWSA1 = 245. I knew this overpredicted, but I was still happy.

End of Week 1: UWSA2 =239.

End of Week 2: NBME 13 = 230

End of Week 3: NBME 15 = 236

End of Week 4: NBME 16 = 236

End of Week 5: NBME 17 = 252 (felt like I, by luck, knew most of the material in this test)

End of Week 6: NBME 18 = 242.

Free 120 (3 days before): 86%

Day Before Test

Just reviewed high yield stuff like lymph drainage by 3pm. My girlfriend got me a massage package so I went to that and got a nice dinner after.


Test Day

I kept a routine for each practice test that I maintained for the real test. Peanut butter sandwich, apple, two granola bars, water, and coffee. Ear plugs with headphones over them.


The actual test felt okay, my feeling was that I was going to perform between NBME 17 and 18. The test was very similar to NBME 18, but my feeling immediately after was more like NBME 17. I marked about 50% of the questions (I am a liberal marker and I wasn’t worried about that, since I did the same for all my practice tests), and I didn’t have time on any block (except like 1 for 2 minutes) to review them (again, typical for me).


Breaks: I am a huge believer in deep breathing and staying calm, and it’s the reason I did well on test day:

After block 1: 5 minute deep breathing at desk

After block 2: Get up and eat a granola bar

After block 3: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 4: Lunch

After block 5: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 6: Went outside and walked around, I had a good amount of break left


I hope that this has helped some of you all figure out what your plans are for Step 1. It’s quite the journey, but my strategy worked well for me and, at least for the dedicated portion, my study partner as well. I never thought I’d score high enough to pursue my dreams, but now anything is possible!


Congratulations. Very happy for you. Well deserved.


Sent from my iPhone using SDN mobile
 
Took the Big Dance on 6/12. It was full of ups and downs. I'd say about 25% of the questions I just knew cold, 10-15% I had never seen before, and the rest I could narrow down to 2 choices that seemed completely reasonable (more-so "Can you read my mind?" type questions). I felt like I got run over some blocks, and others I felt like I did pretty well, which seems to be the general consensus of most folks here after having taken the exam.

Find out my scores this Wednesday, hope everyone does well!
 
Hi there! Insert giving-back-to-the-community comment here. But seriously, reading the success stories of others truly helped me achieve my goal, and I want to give back now.


Step 1 Score: 250


I will preface this with the following:

1. I attend a mid-tier medical school

2. I attended a very low-tier undergraduate institution, which did scare me when I started medical school because most of my colleagues are from great colleges.

3. My MCAT score was a 32, below average for my medical school entering class.


My Strategy

Goals

Identifying goals is really important so you know what you’re after. This should be done relatively early on, perhaps by the middle to end of MS1.


1. I was thinking about pursuing ophthalmology by the end of MS1, so my target goal score was 240+. Other specialties are still on the table for me, but this is the one that required a high score.

2. I have a girlfriend, so after 3PM on every Saturday I wanted to spend with her. We don’t see each other any other day given our schedules, so this was pre-determined blocked off time once MS2 started, and yes, even during dedicated.

3. I run a nonprofit in my spare time, so I wanted to prioritize that along with coursework and Step studying.


Summer after MS1

I spent about two weeks, couple hours a day, reading the renal and cardio sections of First Aid (just the anatomy and physiology sections), because I was weak on those. That’s it, nothing else. Enjoy the summer! (I did research abroad and chilled when I got back).


MS2

This is where plans may vary based on your school schedule/requirements. It took me about 1.5-2 months to come up with the plan below, since I was figuring out what resources worked best for me. My school doesn’t require attendance for most lectures, so I never showed up unless I had to (perhaps 2-3 lectures/week on average). No, I didn’t care to Honor courses because step 1 is 1000x more important. I only honored 3/7 courses MS2 as a result. The example below is for a day when I didn’t have class:



· 5:30-6AM: Wake up/shower/eat/contemplate life

· 6-8AM: Watch relevant Pathoma for today’s lecture content (I searched for the relevant cards in the Bro’s deck and transferred them into my active deck for the unit (so for instance, if I was learning about brain tumors that day I would search for all the cards associated with them in the bros deck and transfer them to my active Neurology deck; by the end of the unit, all the Bros cards should be in your active deck))

· 8:15-10AM: Watch podcasted lectures 2x speed, adding only salient information to my anki deck

· 10-12: Read First Aid for the relevant material (Since I used Bros, I usually didn’t need to add any new cards to the deck)

· 12-1: Lunch (Sometimes I’d drive over to the library for a change of atmosphere, sometimes I would already be there at 8AM.)

· 1-4: Bunch of Anki cards; 3 hours sounds like a lot but the cards really start to accumulate after a while when you’re in a unit (Also did Sketchy a lot)

· 4-5:00 Stuff for nonprofit, research, etc

· 5:00-5:30: Dinner

· 5:30-8: Review yesterday’s Uworld block (I didn’t’ like to review a block right after doing it, I liked reviewing it the next day). What I mean by review is add anki cards to my active deck for the unit from Uworld; took a hell of a long time, but while everyone else was only able to do 1-2 passes of Uworld, I did 4-5 passes for most of the material through anki. This set me apart from most people.

· 8-9: New Uworld block, usually 32 questions (75% of a full block). Usually timed and unit-specific, but as questions from previous units accumulated I added multiple previous blocks at once.

Fridays? Off after 6PM. Weekends? Much of the same as above, except Saturday at 3PM I was done regardless of how I felt so I could hang out with SO.


IMPORTANT POINTS:

1. Firstly, yes this is intense. But, again, I wanted to ensure a high score and really tone down the stress I’d have during dedicated.

2. Secondly, IT IS VERY IMPORTANT, that you spend time reviewing the anatomy and physiology sections of First Aid during the unit you are on. I usually spent about 2 days going through those sections at the beginning of a new unit, using the USMLERx videos and Bros deck. This is what separated me from everyone else. I was thus theoretically behind everyone else in class lectures, but it doesn’t matter since you are ahead for what matters.

3. Thirdly, don’t make your own anki cards for First Aid/Pathoma. I got misdirected by an upperclassman (who I later found was trying to make others look bad on rotations to make himself look good/honor) to make my own cards, and I stopped in January of MS2 and just did Bros. Looking back, I wish I had done Bros from the beginning; would have saved so much more time.


Dedicated (6 weeks, 3 days)

By the time dedicated rolled around, I had gone through everything in so much detail that I felt ready. The only things I hadn’t gone through were biochemistry and micro. I’d finished 70% of Uworld by the time dedicated started (about 71-72% average), with biochem and micro making up the majority of questions I hadn’t done yet. I reset the deck so that I could have a good mixture of questions. I cannot stress enough the importance of doing Uworld during MS2, I’d say this was the major reason I got the score I did.


I picked ONE classmate to study with, who has become a very close friend of mine. Too many people spoil the cooking. We followed an identical schedule every day; he had only done 10-20% of Uworld and did not read most of First Aid by the time dedicated rolled around, but it still worked out for him (he got mid 240s). Clearly, there are many ways to approach MS2 but I definitely felt less stressed during dedicated because of my strategy.


Typical study plan:

· 5:30-7AM: Anki (I usually did maybe like 20-30 cards from two different body systems; remember I already had pristine anki decks with Bros + Uworld combined for each body system)

· 7-8: Shower/eat/contemplate life/get to library to meet up with study partner

· 8-10: Two blocks Uworld, timed random

· 10:15-12: Review Uworld

· 12-1: Sketchy Micro/Pharm (I planned it out so that if I spent an hour a day I’d easily finish all of sketchy by my test)

· 3-8: Review one body system

· 8-9: Biochem (Bros is great for this)

· 9-10:30: Get home, relax, maybe a little anki


The basic strategy was to ensure that I went through each body system twice, at least. I spent about 1-2 days per body system and then moved on to another. I was fluid about it. If I needed to spend more time on cardio because I sucked on it for Uworld/NBMEs, I did that. Don’t be so rigid about the schedule in terms of new content you are trying to learn; you’ll find that your strengths and weaknesses change. Focus on the weaknesses without forgetting the strengths (anki is great for this).


Took one practice test at the start of dedicated, then one every Saturday. Saturday 8-whenever was the test, and then I was off the rest of the day and hung out with my girlfriend. Sunday I reviewed the test all day with my study partner and made a plan for the week in terms of what body systems I wanted to cover and specific topics within those.


Day 1 dedicated: UWSA1 = 245. I knew this overpredicted, but I was still happy.

End of Week 1: UWSA2 =239.

End of Week 2: NBME 13 = 230

End of Week 3: NBME 15 = 236

End of Week 4: NBME 16 = 236

End of Week 5: NBME 17 = 252 (felt like I, by luck, knew most of the material in this test)

End of Week 6: NBME 18 = 242.

Free 120 (3 days before): 86%

Day Before Test

Just reviewed high yield stuff like lymph drainage by 3pm. My girlfriend got me a massage package so I went to that and got a nice dinner after.


Test Day

I kept a routine for each practice test that I maintained for the real test. Peanut butter sandwich, apple, two granola bars, water, and coffee. Ear plugs with headphones over them.


The actual test felt okay, my feeling was that I was going to perform between NBME 17 and 18. The test was very similar to NBME 18, but my feeling immediately after was more like NBME 17. I marked about 50% of the questions (I am a liberal marker and I wasn’t worried about that, since I did the same for all my practice tests), and I didn’t have time on any block (except like 1 for 2 minutes) to review them (again, typical for me).


Breaks: I am a huge believer in deep breathing and staying calm, and it’s the reason I did well on test day:

After block 1: 5 minute deep breathing at desk

After block 2: Get up and eat a granola bar

After block 3: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 4: Lunch

After block 5: 5 minute deep breathing

After block 6: Went outside and walked around, I had a good amount of break left


I hope that this has helped some of you all figure out what your plans are for Step 1. It’s quite the journey, but my strategy worked well for me and, at least for the dedicated portion, my study partner as well. I never thought I’d score high enough to pursue my dreams, but now anything is possible!
Congrats!!! By Bros, do you mean BRS?

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hey guys, coming back from retirement of SDN haha. took a beak from SDN after I started school and now back on it again to look for board studying tips and whatnot.

NBME 13 -225
NBME 18 - 230
NBME 19- 219
and all other NBMEs were in between 225 and 230

UWSA1- 260
UWSA2- 247
Free120-84% correct

UW 2nd pass-78%
Kaplan 1st pass- 75%

as you can see, I dont really have that ideal "upward trend" in my scores like many of you have experienced, which made it hard to for me to gauge my improvement. Especially with UWSA scores being extreme outliers from my NBMEs.

I'm taking the test next week and I was hope if you guys could help me gauge what kind of score I could be expecting.

thanks guys!
 
hey guys, coming back from retirement of SDN haha. took a beak from SDN after I started school and now back on it again to look for board studying tips and whatnot.

NBME 13 -225
NBME 18 - 230
NBME 19- 219
and all other NBMEs were in between 225 and 230

UWSA1- 260
UWSA2- 247
Free120-84% correct

UW 2nd pass-78%
Kaplan 1st pass- 75%

as you can see, I dont really have that ideal "upward trend" in my scores like many of you have experienced, which made it hard to for me to gauge my improvement. Especially with UWSA scores being extreme outliers from my NBMEs.

I'm taking the test next week and I was hope if you guys could help me gauge what kind of score I could be expecting.

thanks guys!
UWorld over-approximates by 15-20 points. Based on your scores you should be able to score between 225-235. You never know though, some people have scored over 250s with your scores. It all comes down to luck of draw on test day (i.e. if you have questions that you know well or topics that you are more comfortable with). Just keep working hard and go over material you are not comfortable with and you should be fine. Good luck next week!
 
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