Third year is about playing the game on the wards and rocking the shelf exams.
To play the game on the wards:
- Attitude is probably the most important part of your clinical grade.
- Always, always, be on time and prepared for rounds.
- You don't actually need to kiss ass. All you have to do is be friendly and get along with people.
- go out of your way to be helpful (but don't kiss ass)
- learn from your patients and read around the issues your patients have
For shelf exams:
Talk to upper classmen and get the right books and get USMLE world
The shelf exam is usually what determines your grade because most people don't differ that much on the wards.
To add to my post:
You may think you dont stick out as an individual to your resident and may want to try to one-up you fellow students. It is a bad idea. More often than not, you just look like an idiot. That is not to say that you shouldn't try and nail the questions you get asked and present well. Just don't try and show up your classmates to get noticed. Do your job and you will get your grade. It is generally not dependent on how the guy next to you does.
Don't round on your fellow classmates' patients. That is incredibly douchy. If you happen to have some lab data/radiographs on your classmates patient and they are asked about it, you shouldn't answer. If they don't know it, hand them the piece of paper inconspicuously and let them read it out. Believe it or not, you look much better by being a team player than by knowing everything about every patient.
Shelf exams is generally a stricter cutoff for the grades. Let's say to get an honors you need an 85 raw score on the shelf and an 85 score for your clinical grade. Most clerkship directors (in my experience) are more likely to give you leeway on your clinical grade. So if you rock the shelf and just miss the clinical grade, you often get that honors. However, if you do well on the clinical section but miss the shelf score you are SOL on getting that honors.
1.) If I manage to visually recall a question I did earlier this year out of 2000 that would be pretty impressive.
2.) Honoring clerkships > Acing Step 2 (although, if you're nailing the shelf exams, I suspect that might help you perform better on Step 2...)
edit: and no, getting UWorld doesn't mean you don't have to do other stuff to study. I probably averaged 3 sources per rotation.
If you honor your clerkships (especially medicine) you should be in very good shape for step 2. The shelf exams are much harder than step 2. I though step 2 was a complete joke in comparison. I barely studied and went up significantly from step 1.
I think a good rule of thumb for sources is at minimum 1 text (blueprints, casefiles, step up) and one question source (pretest, appleton and lange, USMLE world)
What I'd recommend:
OB-GYN- text: blueprints, questions: UWISE
Peds- i used NMS but didn;t really like it in the end. Questions: pretest was ok
Medicine: Text:step up to medicine (best book of the year) Questions: USMLE world+ MKSAP 3 (MKSAP 4 was so-so)
Psych- First aid for psych (good and short) and appleton and lange questions
Surgery- get pestana review. Outside of that I didn't like what I used (first aid for surgery). I heard NMS casebook is good.
Neuro- Blueprints for neuro (excellent book) and pretest for questions