USMLE Official 2018 Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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Took UWSA #2 today, definitely harder than UWSA1. That said I'm pretty stoked because it's basically in line with NBME 18, which makes it hard to brush 18 off as a fluke.

At this point I just can't wait to be done with the damn thing lol. All I need is 230+ so that I can comfortably match EM without having to "explain" my score or try to "compensate."

Of course with all the recent doom and gloom in this thread I could technically still drop 50 points and pass by 1, so thats good I guess...


NBME 13: 200 - 12 weeks out, baseline before any studying

CBSE: 213 - 8 weeks out (studying with classes for 1 month)

NBME 15: 217 - 8 weeks out (back to back with CBSE)

NBME 16: 221 - 4 weeks out (1 week into dedicated)

UW SIM 1: 249 - 3 weeks out

NBME 18: 242 - 2 weeks out

UW SIM 2: 245 - 1 week out
 
Took UWSA #2 today, definitely harder than UWSA1. That said I'm pretty stoked because it's basically in line with NBME 18, which makes it hard to brush 18 off as a fluke.

At this point I just can't wait to be done with the damn thing lol. All I need is 230+ so that I can comfortably match EM without having to "explain" my score or try to "compensate."

Of course with all the recent doom and gloom in this thread I could technically still drop 50 points and pass by 1, so thats good I guess...


NBME 13: 200 - 12 weeks out, baseline before any studying

CBSE: 213 - 8 weeks out (studying with classes for 1 month)

NBME 15: 217 - 8 weeks out (back to back with CBSE)

NBME 16: 221 - 4 weeks out (1 week into dedicated)

UW SIM 1: 249 - 3 weeks out

NBME 18: 242 - 2 weeks out

UW SIM 2: 245 - 1 week out

Great job! Do you remember what % got you the 245 in UWSA2
 
LOL. At the start of this thread everyone talks about how UWSAs are awesome and how UWSA2 is most predictive, and now they are overrated because of a few anecdotes and FFs opinion. probs not the best to be labeling things as over / underrated when you haven't even taken the real test... just sayin.

They are trying to rationalize their performance.

I do it too.

Really hard not to.
 
Do you guys think taking NBME 18 on Saturday (tomorrow) is too close to my step 1 on Tuesday? I've already taken 3 other NBMEs (16, 17, 19).

What are your other scores? Are they fairly consistent with each other? From speaking to others, questions from the old NBMEs do come up again (or in a very similar manner) but your time might be better spent reviewing your weak points. (Full disclosure, I know noting as I have not taken the test yet but this is just my thoughts from spending a little time here).
 
Do you guys think taking NBME 18 on Saturday (tomorrow) is too close to my step 1 on Tuesday? I've already taken 3 other NBMEs (16, 17, 19).

Just be wary of psyching yourself out so close to the test. If you score lower than you were hoping on NBME 18, would that affect your self confidence or your ability to study effectively for those last 2-3 days? If so, I say don't do it.
 
What are your other scores? Are they fairly consistent with each other? From speaking to others, questions from the old NBMEs do come up again (or in a very similar manner) but your time might be better spent reviewing your weak points. (Full disclosure, I know noting as I have not taken the test yet but this is just my thoughts from spending a little time here).

My scores have been consistently in the high 230s/low 240s for all the assessments (UWSAs and NBMEs). The recurrence of questions is exactly the reason I was thinking of doing another NBME before the exam (FOMO); I'm not too worried about getting a feel for my score.
 
Just be wary of psyching yourself out so close to the test. If you score lower than you were hoping on NBME 18, would that affect your self confidence or your ability to study effectively for those last 2-3 days? If so, I say don't do it.

I don't think I'll psych myself out, my main concern was potential burnout with doing a practice test so close to the real thing.
 
Looking for a little advice... Test is in 2 days and NBME 19 freaked me out.

NBME 18: 219 (baseline)
NBME 15: 230 - 4 wks ago
NMBE 17: 240 - 3 wks ago
UWSA 1: 258 - today
NBME 19: 236 - today (with 90% correct?)
Finished UWorld/ USMLE Rx banks at 75% correct

Am I on track to score 240+? I've read that NBME 19 under predicts but I'd love to hear from people who had similar experiences.
 
Looking for a little advice... Test is in 2 days and NBME 19 freaked me out.

NBME 18: 219 (baseline)
NBME 15: 230 - 4 wks ago
NMBE 17: 240 - 3 wks ago
UWSA 1: 258 - today
NBME 19: 236 - today (with 90% correct?)
Finished UWorld/ USMLE Rx banks at 75% correct

Am I on track to score 240+? I've read that NBME 19 under predicts but I'd love to hear from people who had similar experiences.

If you’re not someone that struggles with test anxiety, I’d say you’re very well positioned to score 240+ in 2 days.
 
Anyone else feel like theyre not getting much out of UW second pass? I'm almost halfway through with a 95%+, but I don't feel like I'm learning a whole lot. The only reason I'm keeping up with it is because every few blocks I'll stumble upon a random pearl that I never noticed before, but they're few and far between.
 
Anyone else feel like theyre not getting much out of UW second pass? I'm almost halfway through with a 95%+, but I don't feel like I'm learning a whole lot. The only reason I'm keeping up with it is because every few blocks I'll stumble upon a random pearl that I never noticed before, but they're few and far between.

I stopped doing a second pass for this reason.
 
Anyone else feel like theyre not getting much out of UW second pass? I'm almost halfway through with a 95%+, but I don't feel like I'm learning a whole lot. The only reason I'm keeping up with it is because every few blocks I'll stumble upon a random pearl that I never noticed before, but they're few and far between.
how long did it take you to do your first?
 
UW% finished, prior to 13: 76%
NBME 13: 252
NBME 19: 244
UWSA1: 256
NBME 15: 252
NBME 16: 240 (wat)
UWSA2: 258
NBME 17: 250
18 tomorrow

Test next Thurs. I've hit a wall the past few days mentally, and I'm really not sure what to do with my remaining time. Been blasting thru UW again but its at 95%, so im considering just rewatching pathoma/some sketchy for last few days? Reading FA this week made me want to gouge my eyes out. Would like 250+
 
Like ~6 months, but I was doing it little by little alongside Kaplan and RX during the school year. I finished with 84%.

I would finish that second pass super quick, like 200 a day, just look at the objectives, because you don't want to miss questions that repeat, doing uworld over 6 months one run is a risky game to play, because you don't know what you forgot, I know your killing it, but I would finish uworld so that its fresh in my head right before step
 
Anyone else feel like theyre not getting much out of UW second pass? I'm almost halfway through with a 95%+, but I don't feel like I'm learning a whole lot. The only reason I'm keeping up with it is because every few blocks I'll stumble upon a random pearl that I never noticed before, but they're few and far between.

Yeah, I went around 98% for my second pass... mostly feel like I was wasting my time. I moved on to the old NBME's, loxolab, and kaplan from there.
 
Anyone have some insight if just working through the phys from UWorld and FA is enough? Or is it necessary to go through something like BRS phys? From those who I've spoken to Phys was a really small part of their exam (not sure if this goes across the board though).
 
My $0.2 on Step 1 (got score back a couple weeks ago >250).


Really hope this isn’t the case, because physiology is like the main thing keeping my test scores up


I honestly do think this will pay off. I hammered phys because those questions are very "thinking heavy" questions and would stress me out because they're not memorizable facts. I think it payed off in a big way, because whenever I was trying to memorize something path related, I would bring it back to phys, and then the whole concept would be stuck in my head in a very grounded, long term, way. For example, learning WHY certain murmurs increase/decrease with specific maneuvers. Then, if you see a question on heart murmurs 2 weeks later, you won't be trying to remember which words go together or which way the arrow goes on the chart, because you'll be able to re-think through the phys and pathological process, which is 100% more reliable. Eventually, as you keep repeating these same pathways, you skip the middle thinking step and the answer becomes intuitive.


Being strong in phys will also give you the best possible ammunition for educated guessing on pretty much any tough question. If you know how the body works and it makes sense to you, you can usually piece together the correct answer or at least eliminate a LOT of nonsensical ones.


Other thoughts:


1) High yield is nonsense. There is gonna be SO MUCH that you spent time on that doesn't even show up on the test tangentially, or the questions or so easy that you click and immediately forget them. So you will spend so many hours on all the minute tiny details of rheumatic fever, and then get a question you could have answered in your sleep. And then, you will have at least one page of FA that you blew off because it was tedious and "low yield" that shows up about 5 times. It is what it is. It may mess with your bars, but probably won't mess too much with your score.


It's not at all like a test at the end of a block in med school, where the teachers test you on the most important concepts and you have a general idea of what needs to be asked to pass cardio. Step 1 can ask you 0 questions about hepatitis or penicillin and 3 questions about erlichiosis. I mostly got cranky waiting for my score to come back because I couldn't stop thinking about everything that HADN'T been tested!!!


2) The test itself weirdly feels like doing a bunch of random blocks on UW. By the end of the first block, my heart had calmed down and I felt like I was just doing my thing. Lie to yourself a little bit, and try to not harp on the fact that this is THE TEST.


3) I fully expected more insane, obscure, I-can't-believe-they-asked-that questions. Instead, I got questions that I recognized from my M1 courses, but definitely didn't know (a good chunk of anatomy ones). The good news was that I had some frame of reference to answer the question. The bad news was that those questions made me feel frustrated in the moment, like there was some studying I could have or should have done differently.


Ideally, I could have gone through a bunch of old powerpoints and pulled out some random-not-in-FA-or-UWorld-or-Goljan facts. Realistically, that was never gonna happen. I still did well.


4) You're gonna remember questions, but you're going to disproportionately remember the ones you didn't understand or got wrong. You will randomly flash back to questions and freak out because what if you misunderstood that concept or got confused during the test???? Odds are you're just not remembering the question completely, and you were definitely more likely to get a right answer in a focused testing environment than while trying to fall asleep 2 weeks later. Let it go, resist the urge to look things up.


Don't look things up during the exam either, because you could be misremembering a question and either freak yourself out or reinforcing incorrect thinking.


5) The whole thing is weird because you celebrate before you get your results back, and then you get your results back and you want to ACTUALLy celebrate but life goes on like nothing happened. Try to relax as much as you can directly after the test, because if you wait to de-stress until after you get your score, the world will already have moved on and you'll be on the wards.


6) My NBMEs were totally accurate. I outscored my highest by a small margin. A happy and semi-expected outcome.
 
DLBCL vs. CLL: Which is more common?

They say DLBCL is the most common NHL and CLL is the most common adult leukemia., but CLL is also called "Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma," so why isn't CLL the most common NHL? Is the lymphoma "sub-type" of CLL not as common as DLBCL?
 
I need some opinions/help.

Took UWSA1 (237) yesterday and I'm 3 weeks out. Reviewed the exam and my mistakes are mostly related to either not recognizing the disease or a careless mistake. I think my biggest issue is really reading the stem and seeing what is happening and what they want. Should I turn more to doing more questions these next few weeks? Really confused here because I'm going through these questions just kicking myself in the butt because it was really easier than I thought and I got the easiest questions wrong. I happen to get most of the lower percentage questions right! I can't do this on exam day because that'll likely not happen and I'll end up with a 198 lol

Any thoughts on this? Would really appreciate some insight.
 
I thing do more questions if you feel there isn’t a knowledge gap


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I think my knowledge gap is really in deciphering what disease/process is going on. Once I see it, it makes perfect sense. I had a minimum of 10 of those reviewing just now UWSA1. I might try to do some of the remaining Kaplan that I have and maybe some of that Pastest stuff? OR would someone recommend Rx/the FA question book, because its more FA orientated? I'm on my second pass of UWorld at like 86%.
 
Rx> Pastest. You can revise a lot of FA and learn to figure out the disease.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Is the book any good at all? I have it from a friend who never used it, in the back they have blocks of 40 random Q's. I can do the online ones as well but I already did those during the year, save for a few blocks. Kaplan I have about 1000 untouched questions though
 
My $0.2 on Step 1 (got score back a couple weeks ago >250).





I honestly do think this will pay off. I hammered phys because those questions are very "thinking heavy" questions and would stress me out because they're not memorizable facts. I think it payed off in a big way, because whenever I was trying to memorize something path related, I would bring it back to phys, and then the whole concept would be stuck in my head in a very grounded, long term, way. For example, learning WHY certain murmurs increase/decrease with specific maneuvers. Then, if you see a question on heart murmurs 2 weeks later, you won't be trying to remember which words go together or which way the arrow goes on the chart, because you'll be able to re-think through the phys and pathological process, which is 100% more reliable. Eventually, as you keep repeating these same pathways, you skip the middle thinking step and the answer becomes intuitive.


Being strong in phys will also give you the best possible ammunition for educated guessing on pretty much any tough question. If you know how the body works and it makes sense to you, you can usually piece together the correct answer or at least eliminate a LOT of nonsensical ones.


Other thoughts:


1) High yield is nonsense. There is gonna be SO MUCH that you spent time on that doesn't even show up on the test tangentially, or the questions or so easy that you click and immediately forget them. So you will spend so many hours on all the minute tiny details of rheumatic fever, and then get a question you could have answered in your sleep. And then, you will have at least one page of FA that you blew off because it was tedious and "low yield" that shows up about 5 times. It is what it is. It may mess with your bars, but probably won't mess too much with your score.


It's not at all like a test at the end of a block in med school, where the teachers test you on the most important concepts and you have a general idea of what needs to be asked to pass cardio. Step 1 can ask you 0 questions about hepatitis or penicillin and 3 questions about erlichiosis. I mostly got cranky waiting for my score to come back because I couldn't stop thinking about everything that HADN'T been tested!!!


2) The test itself weirdly feels like doing a bunch of random blocks on UW. By the end of the first block, my heart had calmed down and I felt like I was just doing my thing. Lie to yourself a little bit, and try to not harp on the fact that this is THE TEST.


3) I fully expected more insane, obscure, I-can't-believe-they-asked-that questions. Instead, I got questions that I recognized from my M1 courses, but definitely didn't know (a good chunk of anatomy ones). The good news was that I had some frame of reference to answer the question. The bad news was that those questions made me feel frustrated in the moment, like there was some studying I could have or should have done differently.


Ideally, I could have gone through a bunch of old powerpoints and pulled out some random-not-in-FA-or-UWorld-or-Goljan facts. Realistically, that was never gonna happen. I still did well.


4) You're gonna remember questions, but you're going to disproportionately remember the ones you didn't understand or got wrong. You will randomly flash back to questions and freak out because what if you misunderstood that concept or got confused during the test???? Odds are you're just not remembering the question completely, and you were definitely more likely to get a right answer in a focused testing environment than while trying to fall asleep 2 weeks later. Let it go, resist the urge to look things up.


Don't look things up during the exam either, because you could be misremembering a question and either freak yourself out or reinforcing incorrect thinking.


5) The whole thing is weird because you celebrate before you get your results back, and then you get your results back and you want to ACTUALLy celebrate but life goes on like nothing happened. Try to relax as much as you can directly after the test, because if you wait to de-stress until after you get your score, the world will already have moved on and you'll be on the wards.


6) My NBMEs were totally accurate. I outscored my highest by a small margin. A happy and semi-expected outcome.


This is 100% how I felt about the exam. ++++
 
My $0.2 on Step 1 (got score back a couple weeks ago >250).





I honestly do think this will pay off. I hammered phys because those questions are very "thinking heavy" questions and would stress me out because they're not memorizable facts. I think it payed off in a big way, because whenever I was trying to memorize something path related, I would bring it back to phys, and then the whole concept would be stuck in my head in a very grounded, long term, way. For example, learning WHY certain murmurs increase/decrease with specific maneuvers. Then, if you see a question on heart murmurs 2 weeks later, you won't be trying to remember which words go together or which way the arrow goes on the chart, because you'll be able to re-think through the phys and pathological process, which is 100% more reliable. Eventually, as you keep repeating these same pathways, you skip the middle thinking step and the answer becomes intuitive.


Being strong in phys will also give you the best possible ammunition for educated guessing on pretty much any tough question. If you know how the body works and it makes sense to you, you can usually piece together the correct answer or at least eliminate a LOT of nonsensical ones.


Other thoughts:


1) High yield is nonsense. There is gonna be SO MUCH that you spent time on that doesn't even show up on the test tangentially, or the questions or so easy that you click and immediately forget them. So you will spend so many hours on all the minute tiny details of rheumatic fever, and then get a question you could have answered in your sleep. And then, you will have at least one page of FA that you blew off because it was tedious and "low yield" that shows up about 5 times. It is what it is. It may mess with your bars, but probably won't mess too much with your score.


It's not at all like a test at the end of a block in med school, where the teachers test you on the most important concepts and you have a general idea of what needs to be asked to pass cardio. Step 1 can ask you 0 questions about hepatitis or penicillin and 3 questions about erlichiosis. I mostly got cranky waiting for my score to come back because I couldn't stop thinking about everything that HADN'T been tested!!!


2) The test itself weirdly feels like doing a bunch of random blocks on UW. By the end of the first block, my heart had calmed down and I felt like I was just doing my thing. Lie to yourself a little bit, and try to not harp on the fact that this is THE TEST.


3) I fully expected more insane, obscure, I-can't-believe-they-asked-that questions. Instead, I got questions that I recognized from my M1 courses, but definitely didn't know (a good chunk of anatomy ones). The good news was that I had some frame of reference to answer the question. The bad news was that those questions made me feel frustrated in the moment, like there was some studying I could have or should have done differently.


Ideally, I could have gone through a bunch of old powerpoints and pulled out some random-not-in-FA-or-UWorld-or-Goljan facts. Realistically, that was never gonna happen. I still did well.


4) You're gonna remember questions, but you're going to disproportionately remember the ones you didn't understand or got wrong. You will randomly flash back to questions and freak out because what if you misunderstood that concept or got confused during the test???? Odds are you're just not remembering the question completely, and you were definitely more likely to get a right answer in a focused testing environment than while trying to fall asleep 2 weeks later. Let it go, resist the urge to look things up.


Don't look things up during the exam either, because you could be misremembering a question and either freak yourself out or reinforcing incorrect thinking.


5) The whole thing is weird because you celebrate before you get your results back, and then you get your results back and you want to ACTUALLy celebrate but life goes on like nothing happened. Try to relax as much as you can directly after the test, because if you wait to de-stress until after you get your score, the world will already have moved on and you'll be on the wards.


6) My NBMEs were totally accurate. I outscored my highest by a small margin. A happy and semi-expected outcome.

Thanks for the write up! What do you recommend for phys review?
 
I am done with step 1 and it feels freaking amazing. Cannot stop grinning like an idiot lol.

Overall I thought the test was fine, challenging but not impossible or unfair in any way. I'm not going to look up answers but I'm pretty confident that if I wanted to, I could find maybe 98% of the answers in UFAP. There was almost nothing I hadn't at least heard of before. Not that I knew all the answers by any means, definitely got a ton wrong, but for almost every question I felt like it had been touched on somewhere in my studying or classes.

Most challenging questions were probably some weird ethics questions. There was a good spread of subjects, maybe a little heavy on renal (fine by me), and light on micro and biochem. Very few stats questions which I was cool with.

Vignettes were very long. Luckily time was not an issue for me, but prepare for vignettes that are much longer than any of the practice NBMEs.

I'm terrible at comparing exams so not sure if I felt it was more similar to Uworld or NBMEs.
 
I am done with step 1 and it feels freaking amazing. Cannot stop grinning like an idiot lol.

Overall I thought the test was fine, challenging but not impossible or unfair in any way. I'm not going to look up answers but I'm pretty confident that if I wanted to, I could find maybe 98% of the answers in UFAP. There was almost nothing I hadn't at least heard of before. Not that I knew all the answers by any means, definitely got a ton wrong, but for almost every question I felt like it had been touched on somewhere in my studying or classes.

Most challenging questions were probably some weird ethics questions. There was a good spread of subjects, maybe a little heavy on renal (fine by me), and light on micro and biochem. Very few stats questions which I was cool with.

Vignettes were very long. Luckily time was not an issue for me, but prepare for vignettes that are much longer than any of the practice NBMEs.

I'm terrible at comparing exams so not sure if I felt it was more similar to Uworld or NBMEs.
Congrats, lannister - you go, girl! Hoping for a 260. Glad you felt that you a fair, if not easy, test.
 
Hey guys,

I know earlier I posted asking for peoples feedback who did mostly sketchy path instead of pathoma on their performance! I took NBME 17 today and got a 248! (i'm a 3rd quartile student who has been aspiring to just make a 225 to match internal). I truly wasn't expecting this whatsoever. I will say that so many of the questions I got right that I would have otherwise missed were because I remembered them from sketchy. I will say I started pathoma 2 weeks ago to fill in the gaps and get more familiarized with actual images (and not smurfs sawing off a giant purple mushroom head). I'm praying I can replicate this as my exams in 20 days.

So yeah, just wanted to share that to those who also have been using sketchy path and were unsure of its effectiveness. If only there were a sketchy biostats.......
 
Hey guys,

I know earlier I posted asking for peoples feedback who did mostly sketchy path instead of pathoma on their performance! I took NBME 17 today and got a 248! (i'm a 3rd quartile student who has been aspiring to just make a 225 to match internal). I truly wasn't expecting this whatsoever. I will say that so many of the questions I got right that I would have otherwise missed were because I remembered them from sketchy. I will say I started pathoma 2 weeks ago to fill in the gaps and get more familiarized with actual images (and not smurfs sawing off a giant purple mushroom head). I'm praying I can replicate this as my exams in 20 days.

So yeah, just wanted to share that to those who also have been using sketchy path and were unsure of its effectiveness. If only there were a sketchy biostats.......

I wonder what Sketchy Biostats would look like haha great work!
 
I have some advice for those whose exam is coming up: take the last day off. Plan one or two fun things to do to take your mind off the test. And if you can, spend the last day and the morning before the exam with non-med student friends or family. I spent the afternoon with my aunt and uncle and then stayed at their house last night, and it was the best decision I've ever made. It left me with very little time alone with my thoughts, so I didn't really get a chance to freak out about the exam. As a result I got a full eight hours of sleep and I don't feel like nerves were a factor in my performance at all.
 
@Lannister congrats on finishing and feeling good about it! You seemed like you put a lot of work in throughout M2 to come into dedicated strong. May I ask what you did during M2 specifically alongside classes? (q-bank / Anki / a mix?)

Thanks!! I didn't do anything during M1 or the first semester of M2 besides watching the Pathoma videos related to each block, and I also read FA for our end of block exams. During second semester of M2, I started doing Rx. I started Rx in early-mid January and was done by mid-April. That's really all I did during classes, but I spent a ton of time on each Rx question so it was fairly time consuming. I'd say I spent an average of 3 hours a day studying for step, probably closer to 4 hrs/day near the end.
 
Pretty crushed with how the exam panned out- hope this info is helpful to someone:

NBME 16: 223
NBME 13: 232
NBME 15: 248
UW1: 264
NBME 19: 236
UW2: 254
NBME 18: 236

Actual May 7th administration: 234

I certainly didn't expect to see anything less than 235 to 240. Was hoping for a 245+. Just hoping this score is good enough to get me into Surgery or Anesthesia. I just keep looking at the score report as if it can't be true... Ended up bombing sections that were typically my strength. Idk what happened. I didn't feel as though it went this poorly though it was challenging.

I feel ya, something about may 7th tests looks like all the test takers are underperforming from that day. I thought UWSA2, which i took 4 days pre-exam (i got a 245) would most accurately predict my score but I ended up getting my NBME/UWSA average (low 230s). I guess the hype over UWSAs being worthy predictors was overdone.
 
I am done with step 1 and it feels freaking amazing. Cannot stop grinning like an idiot lol.

Overall I thought the test was fine, challenging but not impossible or unfair in any way. I'm not going to look up answers but I'm pretty confident that if I wanted to, I could find maybe 98% of the answers in UFAP. There was almost nothing I hadn't at least heard of before. Not that I knew all the answers by any means, definitely got a ton wrong, but for almost every question I felt like it had been touched on somewhere in my studying or classes.

Most challenging questions were probably some weird ethics questions. There was a good spread of subjects, maybe a little heavy on renal (fine by me), and light on micro and biochem. Very few stats questions which I was cool with.

Vignettes were very long. Luckily time was not an issue for me, but prepare for vignettes that are much longer than any of the practice NBMEs.

I'm terrible at comparing exams so not sure if I felt it was more similar to Uworld or NBMEs.
Congrats!!! so now that your post exam, what would you say most helpful resource was? do you think doing the NBMEs helped?
 
Congrats!!! so now that your post exam, what would you say most helpful resource was? do you think doing the NBMEs helped?

Absolutely. I had a handful of questions that were straight from the practice NBMEs. I'm also really glad I made anki cards based on UWorld and the NBMEs. I had this one card where every time it came up I was like "OK there is literally zero chance that this concept is going to be on the exam, this is such a bizarrely specific thing... but it's in my cards so I'll memorize it anyways". AND THEN IT SHOWED UP ON THE EXAM. I actually had to stop myself from laughing haha. Like never in a million years would I have gotten that question correct without that Anki card.

In terms of the most useful resource, definitely UWorld, I'm sure that's no surprise. I'm also really glad I did Rx, I've said this before but I think people underestimate the value of Rx. I'm so glad I chose to focus on Rx rather than Kaplan.
 
Absolutely. I had a handful of questions that were straight from the practice NBMEs. I'm also really glad I made anki cards based on UWorld and the NBMEs. I had this one card where every time it came up I was like "OK there is literally zero chance that this concept is going to be on the exam, this is such a bizarrely specific thing... but it's in my cards so I'll memorize it anyways". AND THEN IT SHOWED UP ON THE EXAM. I actually had to stop myself from laughing haha. Like never in a million years would I have gotten that question correct without that Anki card.

In terms of the most useful resource, definitely UWorld, I'm sure that's no surprise. I'm also really glad I did Rx, I've said this before but I think people underestimate the value of Rx. I'm so glad I chose to focus on Rx rather than Kaplan.

Thanks soo much! Appreciate the advice, I was thinking about doing rx again, I finished it 4 months ago haha, but I only have a month left to finish uworld. anyway cograts again! glad your done!
 
Absolutely. I had a handful of questions that were straight from the practice NBMEs. I'm also really glad I made anki cards based on UWorld and the NBMEs. I had this one card where every time it came up I was like "OK there is literally zero chance that this concept is going to be on the exam, this is such a bizarrely specific thing... but it's in my cards so I'll memorize it anyways". AND THEN IT SHOWED UP ON THE EXAM. I actually had to stop myself from laughing haha. Like never in a million years would I have gotten that question correct without that Anki card.

In terms of the most useful resource, definitely UWorld, I'm sure that's no surprise. I'm also really glad I did Rx, I've said this before but I think people underestimate the value of Rx. I'm so glad I chose to focus on Rx rather than Kaplan.

Thank you for your detailed advice. Quick question- do you anki every minute detail from the NBMEs or just the major concept from specific questions? Not sure if it's just me, but some questions contain answer choices that I've never seen before...
 
Thank you for your detailed advice. Quick question- do you anki every minute detail from the NBMEs or just the major concept from specific questions? Not sure if it's just me, but some questions contain answer choices that I've never seen before...

I would say a good percentage of my cards focused on minutiae. I already had a pretty good foundation before starting UWorld, so I had the big concepts down by the time I started making Anki cards. I also find it kind of hard to make cards about major concepts, you know, like how do you make a flashcard that helps you understand the physiology behind hypertension or something very broad like that? I guess I just feel like the major concepts are best learned through practice questions and reading and understand the explanations, rather than trying to memorize.
 
My confidence is in tatters, just got a 244 on NBME 18 (total avg is now 247). Was really hoping to break 250+ and was confident at start of dedicated, but I definitely feel like I've regressed the past 2 weeks. What should I do the next 4-5 days?
 
Sure. If you’re an MD/Phd in a top 20 school. You can pretend that its not hard but it is.


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I didn't say it wasn't hard, but data shows the odds aren't terrible. There weren't 50 MD/PHDs applying NS in 2016 from top 20 schools
 
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