USMLE Official 2018 Step 1 Experiences and Scores Thread

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you had a pretty good progression in your scores from what I recall I am sure it will show on your report!

When you say you got used to uworld do you mean that they just explained the same concepts in a different way than what we are used to seeing on uworld?

Yea I think Uworld has a pattern in the way they test things and explain, especially the classics, that may give a false sense of security. There’s a lot more to the disease than FA/UW discusses. I think this is why it’s worth it to “understand” the whole disease like some people say.

Tbh people say it felt like NBME style or Uworld style - I felt like it was more unique And not super comparable to either.
 
Yea I think Uworld has a pattern in the way they test things and explain, especially the classics, that may give a false sense of security. There’s a lot more to the disease than FA/UW discusses. I think this is why it’s worth it to “understand” the whole disease like some people say.

Tbh people say it felt like NBME style or Uworld style - I felt like it was more unique And not super comparable to either.

Congrats on being done! Similar to what @orangetea said, I feel like you've been improving a lot with your scores and I'm confident you'll score near your average if not higher.

Did you feel that it was tougher to understand the disease process that they were describing or that you would get the disease and then it was tough to answer the question because what they were asking wasn't really stressed in UFAP? (If that makes sense)
 
Took the test today! Glad to be done. I forgot what freedom from studying felt like.

Overall, tough test but it wasn’t horrible. I don’t feel great about it or anything but we’ll see. Felt like another practice test except this time it counted. Good representation of subjects across the board, some really obscure questions, and a decent number of gimmies.
 
Took the test today! Glad to be done. I forgot what freedom from studying felt like.

Overall, tough test but it wasn’t horrible. I don’t feel great about it or anything but we’ll see. Felt like another practice test except this time it counted. Good representation of subjects across the board, some really obscure questions, and a decent number of gimmies.
What percentage of questions would you say were not covered in UFAP?
 
What percentage of questions would you say were not covered in UFAP?

To be honest I am not entirely sure. I would say the majority of questions are definitely in there somewhere. I kind of regret not reading FA as closely as I should have for certain chapters. There were some micro/pharm questions though where I had never heard of some of the pathogens or drugs in the answer choices.

Also, for those who have taken the test. is Step 1 like the mcat where there are some experimental questions?
 
My uncle was paid $1000 dollars to intentionally infect himself with a nasty strain of influenza as a control for the development of interferon therapy back in the 70s.

This was 2 weeks before his step 1, which he ended up failing. Still matched plastics.

+pissed+

Ah, these old timers and their war stories. Did he also have to walk 10 miles uphill to the lab for the injection and then 20 miles uphill on the way back? 😉
 
To be honest I am not entirely sure. I would say the majority of questions are definitely in there somewhere. I kind of regret not reading FA as closely as I should have for certain chapters. There were some micro/pharm questions though where I had never heard of some of the pathogens or drugs in the answer choices.

Also, for those who have taken the test. is Step 1 like the mcat where there are some experimental questions?

Congrats on being done!! I love how a few of you guys are starting to finish up since I've moderately been following for the past few months and seeing everyone start to finish is awesome.

What do you mean by wishing you had read them closer? As in the minutiae was significant on your test? Or you just wish you knew the systems better?
 
Congrats on being done! Similar to what @orangetea said, I feel like you've been improving a lot with your scores and I'm confident you'll score near your average if not higher.

Did you feel that it was tougher to understand the disease process that they were describing or that you would get the disease and then it was tough to answer the question because what they were asking wasn't really stressed in UFAP? (If that makes sense)

I’d rather not go into specifics but god damn it was hard
 
Congrats on being done!! I love how a few of you guys are starting to finish up since I've moderately been following for the past few months and seeing everyone start to finish is awesome.

What do you mean by wishing you had read them closer? As in the minutiae was significant on your test? Or you just wish you knew the systems better?

I just feel like a lot of questions I either got wrong or didn’t know were ones that were answerable with a better knowledge of FA. But at the same time, hindsight is 20-20.

But yeah. I thought it was rough. I tend to do worse on exams than I originally think (which I feel is the opposite of like 99% of med students lol) so I’m not quite sure how to feel. I already know I got a crap ton wrong, especially a handful that I changed from right to wrong. That’s the only thing that sucks about being done
 
I just feel like a lot of questions I either got wrong or didn’t know were ones that were answerable with a better knowledge of FA. But at the same time, hindsight is 20-20.

But yeah. I thought it was rough. I tend to do worse on exams than I originally think (which I feel is the opposite of like 99% of med students lol) so I’m not quite sure how to feel. I already know I got a crap ton wrong, especially a handful that I changed from right to wrong. That’s the only thing that sucks about being done

All good man. You guys need a break! Thanks for the response and enjoy the time you have now to relax and not think about this crap.
 
Finally broke 260 on NBME!

NBME 17 - 263 😀

Of the 8 I got wrong, 3 were changed from correct to incorrect, 1 was careless (literally a repeat question I had seen before and gotten right lol), and 2 I was able to narrow down to two choices. The remaining 2 kinda stumped me.

Exam is on Monday.

Also taking it monday. Good luck!! (I think you’re more than fine lol)
 
Eek third post in a row BUT, how should i spend the next two days? Im not sure how much more to tackle. Should I dabble through UWorld some more?

And sunday, should I relax with Sketchy and the FA rapid review sheets? Or do nothing? Im not even sure, but I am not the type that sit idly lol
 
Took the beast. I’ll write more later, but for now I just feel like it was a bear. My experience was basically what everyone else here has said.

I gave it my best and I got whatever I got though. I don’t think more time would’ve helped (could have even hurt tbh). I feel like I got very good at the Uworld classic questions, but maybe didn’t take enough time to develop a more complete picture of some disease beyond the buzzwords.

Definitely didn’t feel good coming out though. I was in the 240s my last 3 practice tests, but wouldn’t be surprised if I landed in the 210s. I know everyone feels this way though so take from it what you will.

Yea, it's kind of annoying because board materials are heavy on buzz words but the real deal will explain a disease process in ways that we haven't been made to consider it.

With your practice scores, I'm sure you did fine. Press onward and upward. Grats you're done!
 
Hoping to get some feedback on where I stand. My first few NBMEs in weeks 1-3 of dedicated ranged in the 230-235 range.

NBME 18 10 days before my exam - 228
UWSA1 7 days out - 258
UWSA2 3 days out - 249

I’m really hoping to score above a 230 and it looks like that’s likely unless something crazy happens. *knocks on wood*

The discrepancy between the UWSAs and NBMEs leaves me confused as to where I actually stand because I didn’t really change my study habits at all. I would jump for joy if I got anything over a 240, but I’m afraid the UWSAs might overpredict. I think my pre-test anxiety is starting to get to me and I would probably calm down if I knew what to realistically expect. Does anyone have any input?
 
All done with NBMEs and UWSAs:


NBME 15 - 257 / 640 - 12 incorrect (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 262 / 660 - 26 incorrect (2.5 weeks out)
FREE 120 - 93% - 8 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 13 - 259 / 650 - 10 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 19 - 248 / 600 - 15 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 16 - 259 / 650 - 12 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 17 - 263 / 670 - 8 incorrect (4 days out)
NBME 18 - 255 / 630 - 17 incorrect (3 days out)
UWSA 2 - 266 / 680 - 15 incorrect (2 days out)

*Back-to-back on same day

Hopefully what they say is true, and UWSA2 really is the most predictive. I would be thrilled with a 266 (even though my cheeky "goal score" is 270). Although I must say, I much prefer the "feel" of taking NBMEs (excluding 19) vs. UW. I feel much more "in control" when taking NBMEs. Not much I can do now but review some Anki/FA and pray! 😀

Do you think I can hit 265-270 on the real deal?
 
For those of you taking the test soon, I would strongly recommend planning something fun to do as soon as you can after the test with friends or family. I was a wreck yesterday (and still kind of am today) realizing all the mistakes I made and couldn’t think about anything else. So try to plan something that takes your mind off the test after.
 
All done with NBMEs and UWSAs:


NBME 15 - 257 / 640 - 12 incorrect (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 262 / 660 - 26 incorrect (2.5 weeks out)
FREE 120 - 93% - 8 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 13 - 259 / 650 - 10 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 19 - 248 / 600 - 15 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 16 - 259 / 650 - 12 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 17 - 263 / 670 - 8 incorrect (4 days out)
NBME 18 - 255 / 630 - 17 incorrect (3 days out)
UWSA 2 - 266 / 680 - 15 incorrect (2 days out)

*Back-to-back on same day

Hopefully what they say is true, and UWSA2 really is the most predictive. I would be thrilled with a 266 (even though my cheeky "goal score" is 270). Although I must say, I much prefer the "feel" of taking NBMEs (excluding 19) vs. UW. I feel much more "in control" when taking NBMEs. Not much I can do now but review some Anki/FA and pray! 😀

Do you think I can hit 265-270 on the real deal?

Probably 260+ assuming you take the test in the same frame of mind as the others. I’m not in your range of scores but I also liked the NBMEs more, I did reasonably well on my last few NBMEs. I liked the rapid fire nature of them, with a lot of questions going really quickly and others requiring a lot more time. I felt the test yesterday was similar to that style but I know I got quite a few more wrong.
 
Did anyone get around their UWSA2 score on the real deal or was it a huge overprediction?

I just took UWSA2, 6 days out. Got a 237 (74%). I feel like thats high compared to NBMEs

My scores thus far:
UWSA1 (week 1 of dedicated/ 6 weeks ago): 205
NBME 16 (5 weeks ago): 200
NBME 17 (4 weeks): 225
NBME 15 (3 weeks): 221
NBME 19 (last week): 234

I still have NBME 18 to take.

I feel like UWSA2 was kind of tricky and had a lot of biochem/cell questions that made me feel like I was taking the MCAT again but I just don't know how to feel about the score. I have a lot left to learn in 1 week and I'm kind of scared of failing still. So, UWSA2, good indicator or huge score inflation?
 
All done with NBMEs and UWSAs:


NBME 15 - 257 / 640 - 12 incorrect (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 262 / 660 - 26 incorrect (2.5 weeks out)
FREE 120 - 93% - 8 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 13 - 259 / 650 - 10 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 19 - 248 / 600 - 15 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 16 - 259 / 650 - 12 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 17 - 263 / 670 - 8 incorrect (4 days out)
NBME 18 - 255 / 630 - 17 incorrect (3 days out)
UWSA 2 - 266 / 680 - 15 incorrect (2 days out)

*Back-to-back on same day

Hopefully what they say is true, and UWSA2 really is the most predictive. I would be thrilled with a 266 (even though my cheeky "goal score" is 270). Although I must say, I much prefer the "feel" of taking NBMEs (excluding 19) vs. UW. I feel much more "in control" when taking NBMEs. Not much I can do now but review some Anki/FA and pray! 😀

Do you think I can hit 265-270 on the real deal?


Holy hell give me your brain! I need to learn your secrets to STEP studying success. If you don't get in the 260s I would be very surprised. Good luck! I have faith in you.
 
Thanks for the post! Curious - how much micro/pharm ended up on your exam? Been hearing that there isn't as much on it.
I had about 12 questions on the more obscure parasites and fungi and MOA treatments for parasites. Micro is by far my strongest subject and still missed one regarding a very unique parasite presentation pic, I figured that later but I would never know/studied for it, I guess if I had more time I could have eliminated the other answers but was still tough IMO. A couple of the bacteria relationship to a certain disease that I got was ridiculous hard ( I still cant find the answer for it). But some were standard what you would expect. -what helped me itfor the parasites ones is that I usually googled the pics of the presention or saw in firecracker. Like sketchy is good for concept , but I think there is value in seeing what a certain parasite rash looks like in a person on a initial infection , etc..
 
Is anyone keep a tab on how many questions that they missed due to “Dumb” mistakes? I’m up to 20 for sure ( probably another 20 that I don’t remember) . It’s not like I keep trying to remember , but they keep popping up randomly in my mind- kinda of sucks. I wish I could just block it out. But I am writing them out for some reason it calms me down to know.
 
All done with NBMEs and UWSAs:


NBME 15 - 257 / 640 - 12 incorrect (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 262 / 660 - 26 incorrect (2.5 weeks out)
FREE 120 - 93% - 8 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 13 - 259 / 650 - 10 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 19 - 248 / 600 - 15 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 16 - 259 / 650 - 12 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 17 - 263 / 670 - 8 incorrect (4 days out)
NBME 18 - 255 / 630 - 17 incorrect (3 days out)
UWSA 2 - 266 / 680 - 15 incorrect (2 days out)
- m
*Back-to-back on same day

Hopefully what they say is true, and UWSA2 really is the most predictive. I would be thrilled with a 266 (even though my cheeky "goal score" is 270). Although I must say, I much prefer the "feel" of taking NBMEs (excluding 19) vs. UW. I feel much more "in control" when taking NBMEs. Not much I can do now but review some Anki/FA and pray! 😀

Do you think I can hit 265-270 on the real deal?
That 93% on the free 120 is encouraging - most people that score that high do quite well. I'm predicting you'll score a 265.
 
All done with NBMEs and UWSAs:


NBME 15 - 257 / 640 - 12 incorrect (4.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 262 / 660 - 26 incorrect (2.5 weeks out)
FREE 120 - 93% - 8 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 13 - 259 / 650 - 10 incorrect (2 weeks out)
NBME 19 - 248 / 600 - 15 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 16 - 259 / 650 - 12 incorrect (1 week out)*
NBME 17 - 263 / 670 - 8 incorrect (4 days out)
NBME 18 - 255 / 630 - 17 incorrect (3 days out)
UWSA 2 - 266 / 680 - 15 incorrect (2 days out)

*Back-to-back on same day

Hopefully what they say is true, and UWSA2 really is the most predictive. I would be thrilled with a 266 (even though my cheeky "goal score" is 270). Although I must say, I much prefer the "feel" of taking NBMEs (excluding 19) vs. UW. I feel much more "in control" when taking NBMEs. Not much I can do now but review some Anki/FA and pray! 😀

Do you think I can hit 265-270 on the real deal?

I have been following your post for a very long time. I praise you for your dedication and commitment. Good luck for the exam.
 
I had about 12 questions on the more obscure parasites and fungi and MOA treatments for parasites. Micro is by far my strongest subject and still missed one regarding a very unique parasite presentation pic, I figured that later but I would never know/studied for it, I guess if I had more time I could have eliminated the other answers but was still tough IMO. A couple of the bacteria relationship to a certain disease that I got was ridiculous hard ( I still cant find the answer for it). But some were standard what you would expect. -what helped me itfor the parasites ones is that I usually googled the pics of the presention or saw in firecracker. Like sketchy is good for concept , but I think there is value in seeing what a certain parasite rash looks like in a person on a initial infection , etc..

Geeshhhhh, are these still all in FA and they're not really detailed to the necessary extent? That sounds rough though thanks for sharing
 
Alright now that I'm wrapped up, test day experience in brief:

- I was surprised by how lopsided the topics were. Almost no renal, neuro, cardio, biochem. ???????? hello?
- I swear I got 25 questions on micro, 15 of which were on parasites. Got a ton of pharm, and they were mostly low yield one-liners in first aid that I hadn't seen practice questions on.
- Some questions were extremely frustrating in how they were worded. I thought to myself, "Is this really testing my intelligence, or my ability to figure out what the hell this person is trying to ask me"
- Questions I was 100% sure on were uncommon, which was the biggest difference from the NBMEs and UWorld. I had so many questions down to 2 answer choices that sounded right.

Overall, I am VERY happy I flipped through first aid 2x in the final two weeks of dedicated. Not so much to memorize, just to cram stuff into my short term memory. This paid off for quite a bit of questions.

Last two NBMEs were 250+, hoping I pull at least a 240 on this.

Edit: don't mean to scare anyone with this - just trying to get you guys to prepare yourselves for ANYTHING so you don't look like a deer in headlights when things get weird.
 
Thanks for posting! Man, the differences in experiences between people is just insane. Do you know how representative UWorld was on your exam?

I would say the ethics were exactly like NBME, the rest was exactly like UWorld (aside from slightly more ambiguous answer choices - still doable just need to dissect what its telling you). Biggest difference was the passage lengths - some were huge!!! Don't read it all unless you have to!!!
 
I would say the ethics were exactly like NBME, the rest was exactly like UWorld (aside from slightly more ambiguous answer choices - still doable just need to dissect what its telling you). Biggest difference was the passage lengths - some were huge!!! Don't read it all unless you have to!!!

Haha good to know, I'm not always the fastest when it comes to long passages, will keep that in mind.

Did you feel that the content in UWorld was representative of the exam? Seems like FA was a huge help to you
 
Haha good to know, I'm not always the fastest when it comes to long passages, will keep that in mind.

Did you feel that the content in UWorld was representative of the exam? Seems like FA was a huge help to you

Uworld set the foundation for the entire exam no doubt. However I would have gotten probably 10% or more wrong if I didn’t flip through first aid a couple times. My exam may be an outlier from everyone else’s experience so far because I’m still in shock how unbalanced the topics were lol

Also, I got tested on the same specific disease three times in a single block. I thought the exam was trolling me lolol
 
Uworld set the foundation for the entire exam no doubt. However I would have gotten probably 10% or more wrong if I didn’t flip through first aid a couple times. My exam may be an outlier from everyone else’s experience so far because I’m still in shock how unbalanced the topics were lol

Also, I got tested on the same specific disease three times in a single block. I thought the exam was trolling me lolol

Awesome haha just asking because I plan to go through my wrongs in UWorld a little slowly over the next week and maybe just flip through FA and watch a few videos on my weaker points.

That's so strange but I've heard a few other people say they've had the same topic tested multiple times during the exam but multiple in one block would have thrown me off lol
 
Uworld set the foundation for the entire exam no doubt. However I would have gotten probably 10% or more wrong if I didn’t flip through first aid a couple times. My exam may be an outlier from everyone else’s experience so far because I’m still in shock how unbalanced the topics were lol

Also, I got tested on the same specific disease three times in a single block. I thought the exam was trolling me lolol
that's crazy because that's the second time I heard that on here on SDN, multiple questions on same exact thing on same block, would love to get 3 questions on multiple myeloma lol. how many passes of FA did you do?
 
Anyone have any thoughts on what % correct on the real test = certain scores? Like I know its impossible to be exact, but whatever % you think you got right and then your actual score.

I took the test this past week and felt like I was getting 28-30 a block and then flagging the rest / a couple that were out of left field and had to take guesses. I was getting ~248 on my NBMEs and Uworlds being 260+ -- so going from percents of around 85+ to feeling like maybe ~70% on blocks is a terrible feeling and just wanting some feedback 😱
 
Someone posted this before :
270s : >95%
260s : >90%
250s : > 85%

Although I think a lot depends on the form you got.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


N = 1 but my buddy got a 250+ and said there is no way he got more than 75% of the questions right... I dont think anybody really knows. Seems silly to guess IMO.
 
Someone posted this before :
270s : >95%
260s : >90%
250s : > 85%

Although I think a lot depends on the form you got.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
That seems kind of comforting. With my test a week away and current practice scores I won't come close to that but now it seems like I can miss more than an NBME and still get around average. I was worried thinking I could only miss like 30 questions on the whole exam to pass.
 
Alright now that I'm wrapped up, test day experience in brief:

- I was surprised by how lopsided the topics were. Almost no renal, neuro, cardio, biochem. ???????? hello?
- I swear I got 25 questions on micro, 15 of which were on parasites. Got a ton of pharm, and they were mostly low yield one-liners in first aid that I hadn't seen practice questions on.
- Some questions were extremely frustrating in how they were worded. I thought to myself, "Is this really testing my intelligence, or my ability to figure out what the hell this person is trying to ask me"
- Questions I was 100% sure on were uncommon, which was the biggest difference from the NBMEs and UWorld. I had so many questions down to 2 answer choices that sounded right.

Overall, I am VERY happy I flipped through first aid 2x in the final two weeks of dedicated. Not so much to memorize, just to cram stuff into my short term memory. This paid off for quite a bit of questions.

Last two NBMEs were 250+, hoping I pull at least a 240 on this.

Edit: don't mean to scare anyone with this - just trying to get you guys to prepare yourselves for ANYTHING so you don't look like a deer in headlights when things get weird.
Were the parasite covered in First Aid?
 
that's crazy because that's the second time I heard that on here on SDN, multiple questions on same exact thing on same block, would love to get 3 questions on multiple myeloma lol. how many passes of FA did you do?

I did Uworld 1.5x (the “half” being only the subjects I wasn’t as good at”), 1000 Kaplan, and all the embryo from USMLERX (you can get a one week trial for free which is what I did just go get some more questions). I did pathoma probably 6 times front to back throughout the school year so I didn’t touch it at all during dedicated. I read through first aid 2x in my final two weeks of dedicated. It felt like the sweet spot, anything more wouldn’t have helped me at all.
 
Give 'em hell tomorrow, boys

>mfw

1516735689783.jpg
 
Give 'em hell tomorrow, boys

>mfw

I've literally been following your story since you first talked about acing your school exams but not using Step 1 resources back in your MS1 year. You've come a long way since then and I am very invested in your success and wish you the best of luck tomorrow!
 
Score update with 1 week to go! Any possibility of me breaking the 250 mark? Should I take NBME 18 towards the end of this week, or should I just focus on weaknesses?

NBME 13 - 198 (9 weeks out)
NBME 15 - 236 (7 weeks out)
NBME 16 - 240 (6 weeks out)
CBSE - 223 (4.5 weeks out)
NBME 17 - 217 (3.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 254 (3 weeks out)
Free 120 - 84% + NBME 19 217 (2 weeks out)
UWSA 2 - 247 (today - 1 week out)
 
Score update with 1 week to go! Any possibility of me breaking the 250 mark? Should I take NBME 18 towards the end of this week, or should I just focus on weaknesses?

NBME 13 - 198 (9 weeks out)
NBME 15 - 236 (7 weeks out)
NBME 16 - 240 (6 weeks out)
CBSE - 223 (4.5 weeks out)
NBME 17 - 217 (3.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 254 (3 weeks out)
Free 120 - 84% + NBME 19 217 (2 weeks out)
UWSA 2 - 247 (today - 1 week out)

Your score profile is pretty similar to mine, I’ll update you when I get my score back in a few weeks!
 
Score update with 1 week to go! Any possibility of me breaking the 250 mark? Should I take NBME 18 towards the end of this week, or should I just focus on weaknesses?

NBME 13 - 198 (9 weeks out)
NBME 15 - 236 (7 weeks out)
NBME 16 - 240 (6 weeks out)
CBSE - 223 (4.5 weeks out)
NBME 17 - 217 (3.5 weeks out)
UWSA 1 - 254 (3 weeks out)
Free 120 - 84% + NBME 19 217 (2 weeks out)
UWSA 2 - 247 (today - 1 week out)
yes I would take 18, its most accurate I think, just based on previous posts
 
PRE-DEDICATED
NBME 15 (diagnostic; Jan 19): 182
NBME 17 (Feb 11): 198
NBME 13 (March 12): 190
UWSA1 (sometime in March): 232
CBSE (April 26): 215
DEDICATED:
NBME 16 (May 8): 215
NBME 18 (May 17) : 225
NBME 19 (June 4): 238
UWSA2 (today): 245

As you can see, I started out pretty weak but really made progress during my dedicated period. I take the exam on Thurs. I want to go into either psych or internal medicine, so I don't need a super high score. But I want to do as well as possible; as an IMG I have an extra hurdle to jump over, and a decent step score would definitely help.

I would be happy if I broke a 240 on test day.

Do you guys have any advice for me at this point? I am going to keep reviewing the topics I am least comfortable with. I have about 900 questions left in Rx. I almost finished UWorld (with the exception of anatomy, which I hate and is low yield anyway, haha), but I have about 700 questions that I got wrong on my first pass that I could redo.

Do you think reviewing FA for 3-4 hours per day and doing 200ish questions would be a good idea for my last two days of prep? I am afraid of burning myself out, and not being able to focus on test day from fatigue. I did sleep nearly 12 hours last night to try to give myself a little break and regain my stamina.
 
Just got out. I'll definitely do a more detailed write up later, but these are my initial impressions:

-UWorld and First Aid covered >99% of the exam. There were literally only 2 question where I had absolutely no idea, but even those were arguably fair game material and I simply failed to connect the dots / recognize the underlying principle. That said, I totally see now why a lot of students think that there are "wtf questions" or experimental questions on Step. That's because about ~5% of the questions are pure logic puzzles where you have to apply UW/FA knowledge to arrive at the answer by process of elimination. For example, several times the correct answer was a drug, disease, or biochemical entity that is NOT covered in UW/FA, however you can totally nail the question if you can recognize why all the other answer choices are wrong. This category also included some questions that I would categorize as "trick" questions, where you totally recognize the disease, but there is some bit of information in the stem that totally disrupts your usual heuristic or perhaps the answer you're expecting isn't included as an option. In my opinion, one of two things could be going on in this type of question - You may have failed to study some esoteric nuance of the topic, and they want you to step out of your comfort zone and pick the "obvious answer" anyway even if it doesn't feel totally right. The other type is the antithesis of the previous form -- where they describe what seems like a classic pathology EXCEPT for some bit that doesn't fit, and this time you're not supposed to ignore it because the answer is actually a related but slightly different pathology that you've never heard of but which you can discern based on its name.

So overall, with the exception of those 2 questions that seemed completely foreign, the test seemed entirely devoid of "experimental" or "wtf" questions. If you told me that every single question counted, I would believe it.

And then about 5-10% of the exam consisted of questions that were simply very difficult but "fair game." These were mostly physiology or biochem questions where I had to do mental gymnastics to build an argument for a particular answer, and even then I wasn't totally confident in my answer. These are the type of questions where I knew I could figure it out if I had extra time but couldn't process it in time to arrive at a conclusive answer. Sometimes I had to resort to playing "which one is not like the others" with the answer choices, lol.

Finally, there were a handful of questions that weren't particularly hard and would otherwise be a slam-dunk, but I just couldn't remember something about the topic and spent way too long thinking about it. Luckily, there were only like 2-3 of these, and I think I got them right in the end. This is where memorization pays off.

Ethics, stats, imaging, and auscultation were EZ-PZ.

Stems weren't any longer.

The "Step 2" style question rumor is a complete myth. The clinical management questions were pure logic questions. Would knowing the management algorithm for X disease cold by having read UptoDate make it easier? Duh. But that's not the exam writer's intention. The questions were 100% written for pre-clinical students and can be answered with common sense if you have solid fundamentals.

A couple histology questions were tough.

Time management was only slightly tougher than practice tests. I still finished the blocks with ~20 minutes to spare, but the difference was that I marked way more questions. I mark very liberally to begin with, and today my threshold was even lower because of the high stakes. This may have been a strategic error in hindsight as I had too many marked cards to review on a few blocks. However, I settled into a strategy of "hand-marking" the ones I REALLY wanted to come back to by writing their # on my dry-erase sheet.

And finally, I totally reject what has become somewhat of a cliche expression among med students that Step 1 feels like "7 hard blocks of UW." To me, it felt like 7 blocks of really hard NBME. I think most people just say its similar to UW because the software looks just like UW. However, the "feel" of the questions, in my opinion, was pure NBME.
 
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