What was your daily schedule like on a typical day of dedicated?
Keep in mind that I was starting from a very low baseline (197), so my schedule was designed with learning in mind rather than perfecting.
For the first month, here is an average week:
M-F: (I varied the timing and order of these a good bit, but stuck with the time allocations pretty tightly. this is just what was in my excel sheet)
6AM-7AM: biochem in FA
7AM- 12:30PM: ~ 21 pages in FA on a subject (# of pages covered in a day varied with my comfort per subject)
12:30PM-2PM: exercise/ lunch
2PM-3PM: Sketchy micro or pharm
3PM-6PM: 1 block of U world/ review
6PM-7PM: sketchy micro or pharm
7PM-8:30PM: pathoma
8:30PM dinner then sleep
Sat
6AM-8PM: (lunch/ exercise still at noon) back through all of the FA I had gone through during the week (really miserable haha)
Sun
6AM- whenever I felt like stopping (usually around 3 or 4PM: finish FA review then do 2 blocks of UW and review. Also review of my missed anki deck
The second month was the same general structure, except I started hitting my anki from my U world every morning instead of only weekends, and there was no second pass of FA on Saturday (I just did one extra "normal" M-F day as described above). During this time, I went back through FA one more time (spent only 2 hours per ~21 pages this time), as well as most of pathoma. And in the afternoon I switched to doing 2 blocks of U world per day instead of one (roughly 2.5 hours per block). The flu kind of screwed up the second half of my schedule, but I managed to get through almost everything I wanted. I took my NBMEs on Sundays and would take the day off after reviewing them.
If I could change it, I would have probably spent less time on biochem, micro, and pharm, and more time on pathology. But overall I feel most things I probably missed were a result of my medical education and could only have been corrected by going to a school with a different curriculum. I owe wikipedia and osmosis (used a good bit of the youtube videos) some serious donations.