@AnotherLawyer, I think our personal discussion has run its course, but I'd be happy to debate this ad nauseum with you via private message if you like. It really boils down to this:
YOU BELIEVE that my message that students should view "the real exam" as trending strongly toward SB-level content is unnecessary alarmism (correct me if I'm wrong).
I BELIEVE that viewing the real exam as trending strongly toward SB is
precisely what is needed to save students from unnecessary alarm and frustration on test day.
1. Calling my message "alarmism" is the most subjective of all opinions. How would you propose to quantify "alarmism" vs. "prudent advance notice"?
2. I shared quotes from Reddit because these are real people, forum users can read the quotes for themselves, and most of those real people are describing the SB-like exam day content similarly. In your last post, you have now identified the Reddit users as "alarmists" too...at least I have some company
😀.
It is rather ironic for you, as one anonymous poster on an online forum, to question the empirical validity of other anonymous posters to another online forum. Yep, it's all just online forum stuff. I don't expect students to automatically believe me and/or the Reddit community over you, we're all posting opinions in an online forum. But, I do hope this dialogue will inspire all students to do a little more research (and maybe to crack open that SB a little earlier in their studies), after which I believe they will see for themselves that what I am saying is true.
3. You seem to think I developed my opinions as a result of reading Reddit exam reaction threads.
Wrong cause-and-effect. No, I've had this belief for at least two years now, and have watched as feedback from a variety of sources has continually supported the idea that the real exam is trending strongly toward SB. The January reaction threads were really just the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back, in that they motivated me to post more about the issue here on SDN.
4. One significant piece of circumstantial evidence is the fact that all of the AAMC materials written AFTER the 2015 transition look SB-like, and nearly every non-SB-like AAMC passage can be DOCUMENTED as a recycled passage from OLD AAMC materials. If you look at AAMC Scored 1 and 2, the easier passages just happen to be recycles. The hardest passages just happen to new passages cited to journal articles, with the heavier experimental focus like SB. What the AAMC is doing *today* looks more SB-like, and they are mixing that new content up with a few "older-style" passages.
5. The actual scores earned by "the alarmist Reddit users" (as you affectionately called them), or the % correct on the SB and how that does/does not correlate to exam day raw score, is irrelevant. The score scale will do its thing...
my only focus is that students were not expecting the difficulty they saw on exam day. In my experience, students who focus on the SB-level of difficulty and prepare accordingly have no such exam day anxiety. You also cannot convince me that, whatever number the score scale may spit out, students across the board will not score higher if they fell the exam day went exactly as expected, and relatively lower if they had to work though surprise, anxiety, or frustration.
6.
The worst that could come from MY message is that students are prepared to see 60-90% SB passages and they only see 40-50%. Result = A confident, calm, test-day experience and the real exam might even feel "easier" than expected, all of which can only positively impact score performance.
7.
The worst that could come from YOUR message is that students continue to believe the message that they "might see '
a few' SB-like passages on test day," and they actually see 60-90%." Result = Greater anxiety and surprise on test day, which can only negatively impact score performance.