Some perspective on qbanks and a caveat about the exam

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Dr. Pepper

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Hello there,

I just took the USMLE exam and got my score back recently, and so I wanted to give a little perspective because I used all 3 major qbanks (Kaplan, USMLERx and USMLE World).

I started studying about 2-3 months out and the majority of my studying was using qbanks. If it is any justification for trying to give some advice on these qbanks, I ended up doing fine (250). I realize that on SDN that is nothing special, but still, I'm sure someone would have asked eventually. For the love of God, do as many (GOOD) questions as humanly possible. If you have a bad set of questions, don't do them (and you'll know if they are bad questions, I'm looking at you Lange).

I started off by using Kaplan Qbank. The explanations for these questions are truly fantastic, sometimes (though rarely) even better than the UWorld explanations. However, the questions, especially in some topics (I'm looking at you, micro), are just ridiculously nit-picky. With that said, the explanations are very well done and the amount of topics covered is quite good. I would recommend this qbank if you have quite a bit of time (I'll speak on this later). This qbank will help you a lot on day to day basis though after the exam (and trust me, there is a large period after the exam, really). The understanding it fosters is really quite impressive.

Second, I did USMLERx. This was a qbank that I really wanted to hate (I like tough questions, I like questions which really challenge you), and these questions, for the most part, do not do that. They are not meant for you to think very critically. They are meant for you to recognize patterns, associations and simple facts. With that said, I have to have to highly recommend this qbank. Some say that you just need First Aid, and you don't need this qbank, and I can attest that I have friends who also scored in the 250s who never used this bank (and as you probably all know, people all approach this test differently and many do very well regardless). With that said, I hated (still do, btw) First Aid with a passion. It is a great great resource, I have to recommend it, but again, I hate random jumbles of facts without context. THEREFORE, if you have the time, please please go through this qbank, because it's sole purpose is to learn First Aid, and it does so in a way which is far more bearable than reading that god-forsaken book day in and day out.

The questions are very straightforward and very annoying, but it will literally drill in at least 1/2 to 2/3 of the information of First Aid into you (and I mean really, by the time I was finishing up the qbank, almost every question I either knew the answer or knew the answer they were looking for, but just forgot the little First Aid bullet detail). Therefore, the pros for this one is that it will drill First Aid into you. Do you need it? Probably not if you are focused enough to read First Aid, but before you just blow off the expensive qbank and read First Aid instead, I want you to think to yourself, can you really really identify a minute detail in a clinical scenario/step 1 question? Possibly, I wouldn't take that chance. Therefore, if you have the time, please get this qbank. Also, the qbank's software sucks, it crashes a lot and sometimes when you scroll down some of the text disappears. My advice is get through this qbank quickly simply to have less days dealing with the terrible software.

Third, I used USMLEWorld. This thing is literally as good as everyone says it is (which is pretty ridiculous by SDN standards which tends to be critical of just about everything). I remember the first day I used this and I thought, my god, the questions and the explanations on this thing (and specifically, the images, the visual aids, the charts) were all so fantastic, that I thought I made a mistake starting this just about a month out. But I ended up being fine. Start this around a month or 1.5 months or so before your test and you should do well. This is the only qbank I ended up reviewing my answers at all. Do this qbank. Don't even think about not doing it, you will regret it.

So my advice, and then a little caveat about the exam.

Kaplan: As much as I liked this qbank, I can't recommend it unless you have at least 2-3 months. It is great, and the explanations are great, but the questions are not very similar to the exam, and the level of detail and context doesn't match up too well. With that said, the explanations did help me answer at least quite a few tough questions on my real exam, and I can say for certain that my general understanding of the underlying topics tested on Step 1 (you will have to know the principles after Step 1, please remember that) is very strong because of Kaplan.

USMLERx: Didn't want to like this qbank, but it really does drill in the important facts. If you have 2 months, please use this as well as USMLEWorld. It will drill important facts that you will see on the exam (look below for the caveat).

USMLEWorld: There is no question, use this qbank. Nothing more needs to be said.

A caveat on the exam (5 of them): I wish someone told me this stuff before I took my exam.

1. Not exactly like USMLEWorld: First off, the scary thing is that a lot of questions are NOT like USMLEWorld, despite that 1:1 correlation you always hear about on these boards. The hard questions will be like USMLEWorld and, here's the kicker, the EASY questions are pretty much exactly like USMLERx questions. Kaplan questions, though again I love them and I think they will get you some points based on pure understanding, really are not as accurate if you ask me. I wish the exam was all UWorld questions. I would have a lot more respect for the exam if it did. Although I did fine on the exam, I still hate it, I think it tests nothing and I think the world would be a better place without it, but still, what can I do.

2. Unknown questions: There were still a bunch of questions which I had never heard of or thought of before. Not surprisingly, they tend to correlate with your weaker subjects.

After doing upwards of like 5,000 questions, I thought they couldn't throw anything new at me. They did, god knows where they found those questions, but they did. I have no idea how to prepare for them.

And the thing which really just shocked me is they asked questions about the TOPICS I ALREADY KNEW. It's like you are on one of those married gameshows where they ask you questions about your spouse. You go in all confident because you've seen that person day in and day out for like 20 years, and then they ask you something like "what's your wife's favorite type of sushi?" or "what does your wife think about skydiving" and you just think, by God, that's a good question but I never even thought about asking that. Then your wife looks at you begrudgingly because not only did you not win any money, but she also thinks you are an insensitive jerk, and you obviously got a low step score as well (sorry for that analogy).

Just know that it is ok, and you can still get a good score if you had a significant number of questions being unknown (I usually did a first pass of questions I knew for sure and ended up with about 8-12 questions left; did a second pass of questions I was pretty sure about or down to 2 choices and ended up with around 5-6 questions left and then had 5-6 questions where I just thought, god damn it, I hope that the answer is B). You will find that it is very hard to predict your performance because much of your performance comes down to these 8-12 or 5-6 questions in which it is either B or C (pray that it is B). I have no idea how to prepare for it. I would just go with my first response or gut response (or B). I'm sure someone has a better answer. I'll leave that to another more wiser individual.

3. The kicker: I talked to a few people about how their exams (btw, don't recommend this unless you are a masochist like myself; when you are done, be done and go get some ice cream) went and the scariest thing of all is that our exams seemed very different, but in an interesting way. Everyone got questions on high yield topics and such (there was a good amount of variability in difficulty, btw, so don't think that an easy or hard exam has any bearing on your score), but everyone had a "kicker" subject. By this I mean that everyone had a low yield topic in which they had a fairly significant percentage of questions, much higher than otherwise predicted, on their exam as opposed to other relatively low yield topics (for example, I had quite a bit of anatomy on my exam, a friend of mine had a bunch of behavioral science, another had a bunch of cell bio). This is probably the scariest part of the exam if you ask me, because you can't prepare for every lower yield topic, but you really will get one which has a fair number of questions and every other low yield topic you essentially get no questions at all (I spent my last day of studying on neuroanatomy because I hate neuroanatomy with a passion and thank the heavens I had like 2 questions on it on my exam). Solution: Pray to God that the kicker subject is not the one you aren't prepared for. This will have a serious impact on your exam (I have no doubt that this is one of the main things that separates 250s from 260s), and there's not much you can do about it.

4. This is a minor caveat: This test is long as hell. I don't know if you realize what it's like to be in a sterile PROMETRIC center for like 8 hours, but by the last two blocks, I was honestly just bored and exhausted. I wasn't nervous, I wasn't excited, I was just plain bored and wanted to go home. Bring some snacks, fruit etc. for your break periods.

5. Sleep the night before: I'm not even going to pretend and say "get a good night's rest the night before." Unless you are some ridiculous buddhist monk or are heavily medicated, you aren't going to get a good night's sleep the night before; in fact, you'll be nervous as all hell, but honestly, the adrenaline will carry you through the exam and you'll be fine. Just watch a nice movie, listen to some good music or go for a good walk the day before, because you sure as hell are not getting sleep. And the day of the exam, since you don't have any sleep, it helps every now and then to think back on that nice movie or walk or music, it sure helped me.

Well, that was a lot longer than I expected. Spend 2-3 months at most studying for this exam, and do just a ton of questions, and you will do fine. If you carry around First Aid your first year, I will give you a stare of death and I will not want to talk to you, and if I was a girl, I would refuse to date you, and that is 100% true. It does nothing for your score, and it just makes everyone around you nervous and angry (I equate first years with the first aid book with that antibiotic disk-diffusion test (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirby-Bauer_antibiotic_testing). I spent most of my pre-clinical years sleeping in, watching movies and reading books (some of which were medical books, but only because they were interesting to me), and I'm far prouder of that than my step score.

Anyway, best of luck. The exam sucks, but if you take my advice, I think you may breathe a little easier when your time finally comes. Please realize that this exam is just a terrible idea, and a good or bad score says nothing about you as a future doctor (and as a person). Anyone worth their salt will judge you much more on your hard work and your character. Prepare well and do well, but know that there are far more important things in life than your step score.

Best of luck to you all.
-Dr. P.
 
Wow. Great score, and great post. It's hilarious that a 250 isn't great on SDN.

I'm a little over a month out and considering adding Rx, but I can't decide.

Also, did you do any of the NBME's? What was your opinion of them?
 
This is a terrific post, thanks so much for taking the time to write this up! What advice would you give to those (cough) who have 5-6 weeks of dedicated time to study and haven't done a QBank intensively yet? Just hit UWorld hard, or get another QBank like USMLERx to complement it? Thanks again!
 
Do you mind saying your overall percentage in the qbanks?

Specifically, with Rx, your percentage and predicted score? I just finished Rx and started World today.

I really didn't like Rx's explanations, but World's explanations are SOOO much better.

Thanks
 
I really didn't like Rx's explanations, but World's explanations are SOOO much better.

Thanks

I've done a few sets of World questions and I love everything about it. I'm worried about wasting time going backward to starting Rx with about 5.5 weeks to go. Is using only World advisable? I just want to figure this out now because I know once I get down to 2-3 weeks left I definitely will not be touching any other qbank but World.
 
Wow. Great score, and great post. It's hilarious that a 250 isn't great on SDN.

I'm a little over a month out and considering adding Rx, but I can't decide.

Also, did you do any of the NBME's? What was your opinion of them?

I know that you don't want to hear that answer, but the answer depends on you. I was able to do pretty consistently 150 questions a day, including reviewing the questions and even making little notes. Give yourself another week to review your answers from USMLE World. 2000 q/ 150 questions(I think this is more valuable than doing Rx) = approximately 2 weeks + 1 week for review USMLE world + 1 week for just reading First Aid/Goljan and doing an NBME, and I think that your month is pretty much full. I do think the last week should be reading First Aid/Goljan and doing an NBME.

However, if you have even one more week than that, you could probably get through a lot of Rx (do the hard questions only and if you have time medium questions, you could probably do like 700-1000 of them). If you have the money and an extra week, I think it might be worth it. However, after USMLE World, Rx won't have much of a benefit (Rx is good prep for Uworld; it gives you a lot of the facts that you will need, but it doesn't have the understanding necessary for UWorld). Sorry for the convoluted answer. If you have just a month, nothing more, don't do Rx. If you have any more time, even a few days and you have the money (if you don't, then just don't do it, it won't make too big of a deal), then I would do it, just do the medium and hard questions, maybe even pick your weak sections and it should be pretty helpful. I always advocate more questions the better, but make absolute sure to make the last 2 weeks purely UWorld and First Aid/Goljan review. Of all the advice I can give, I think that holds the most true.

To answer your question about NBME, I did not take an official one before. I was honestly too nervous. I looked at three of them (looked at questions, looked at suggested answers) simply to see if there were any big surprises (ie: were the types of questions completely unlike the ones I saw) and there were not, so I didn't bother. Yes, to add to anxiety, I had no idea what my score was, though I had a good idea from my q banks. So I would recommend doing 1 or 2 real ones if you can take the anxiety, and that should probably be sufficient. I was told that 7, 10 and 11 are good ones.

Good luck.
 
I would stick with World at this point.

Rx was more of a 'flash card' bank for me, where I would do them to throw away. (3k questions). I honestly didn't learn that much from the questions, but it did give me an idea of how to look at first aid.

World has mini-lessons per question. High quality..
 
This is a terrific post, thanks so much for taking the time to write this up! What advice would you give to those (cough) who have 5-6 weeks of dedicated time to study and haven't done a QBank intensively yet? Just hit UWorld hard, or get another QBank like USMLERx to complement it? Thanks again!

Dude, I remember you from when I was applying to med school. You are a smart guy, seriously. I remember seeing your posts at same time that I was applying, and if your title is a reference to rammstein, then I know that too (that's why I remember your name).

I posted some similar advice just a minute ago. 5-6 weeks I would hit UWorld hard and spend the last 2 weeks reviewing UWorld and then First Aid/Goljan. Honestly, I think that if you have the money, you could probably give Rx a good run. Something you don't realize is that your productivity depends on a good balance of the amount of materials you have vs. your kind of mood. You have 5-6 weeks, a very long time, trust me (I studied more like 2 months, of which only the last month was pretty serious), so if you are able to feel pretty calm, I would get both and that way when you are tired of doing UWorld questions at the end of each day (and you will be, they are tiring), you can knock out some Rx questions. Again, just do the hard and/or medium ones, don't bother with easy. If you get very anxious, then don't bother, just get UWorld. If you want to be safe, get UWorld only and then review it (by review, I mean go through your starred questions, re-read your notes or re-read the explanation) and if you have more than a week (last week should be first aid/goljan and maybe an NBME), go ahead and give RX a shot.

One note on questions: I know everyone here loves annotating into First Aid, but I never did. I thought it took way too much time (trust me, I tried, it was terrible). I would read a question, if I though it was good, I would star it and then write a few sentences in the notes section of the question. This allowed me to get done more like 200 or even 250 a day as opposed to 150. Some people love annotating, and if you do, then annotate away. Trust your instincts and past methods. Hell, I'm just one guy with a decent score, I'm no authority.

Hope that helps. Seriously though, I'm not kidding, I remember your posts and your profile from before, you are far smarter than myself, you will do just fine.

PM me if you'd like and let me know how you're doing (I don't remember what school you go to).

Good luck.
 
Great advice Anakin.

Yeah, sorry about that. I made this profile a long time ago, and I thought (still do) that it's a cool picture. As you can probably tell from my posts though, I'm nothing like the guy. I'm quite lazy and non-ambitious in real life.

I relate much better to Homer.
 
Do you mind saying your overall percentage in the qbanks?

Specifically, with Rx, your percentage and predicted score? I just finished Rx and started World today.

I really didn't like Rx's explanations, but World's explanations are SOOO much better.

Thanks

Sure. There's some chart online which has some kind of conversion which is probably bs (http://usmle-score-correlation.blogspot.com/), but it's not too bad. I don't remember my actual scores anymore and I'm sure as hell not logging back in, but I have ballpark figures. And I'm going to do a whole lot of number fudging, so please take with a grain of salt as I TOOK NO ACTUAL SCORED NBMEs, so take this with the largest grain of salt possible. BTW, I recommend that you take at least 1 scored NBME. I preferred not to deal with the anxiety of having a score in mind, but it's probably practical to do at least 1. I did however look at 2-3 NBME exams to get familiar with the format (I think it was 6 and 7).

I started Kaplan, ended up with something like mid 60s, finished about 1.5 months out. That correlates to like a mid 230s which sounded about right.

I did Rx, ended up in something like low to mid 70s about 1 month out. No correlation here, but felt like low 240s.

Then on World (probably the only important score thing) I think that I ended up something like 75% and finished about 2 weeks out. This correlates with like 250s, which is fairly accurate. I should mention that on my real Step 1 my "kicker" subject was anatomy, which kind of sucked because I'm quite bad at anatomy, so I'd imagine that score chart I predicted is fairly accurate ballpark wise to predict like a 255 so I'd say someone getting arond 75% UWorld probably should expect somewhere in the mid 250s.

Hope this helps. Again, it really means nothing unless you are like a few weeks out. Your scores will improve and it makes no difference how you progress as long as you end up scoring well near the end. Sorry for the number fudging, but I think this gives a pretty fair idea of expectations. If it helps at all, I left thinking the test thinking I did decent to slightly bad (probably all of the anatomy questions) and predicted a 240, so my guess is that a lot of questions the answer was B. Because for some of the anatomy questions, I kid you not, there were no thoughts, just B. Hard to psychoanalyze your way past an anatomy question.

Good luck to you.
 
A truly enjoyable post! And makes me feel a whole lo better, coz I cant stand First Aid either....
Thank you for sharing, and congrats on a gud score( regardless of the SDN mean).
 
Thanks for posting dr. pepper. I didn't use Rx, instead electing to double up on kaplan/Uworld w/ 2 passes each. Kaplan is definitely nitpickier and has more WTF questions, Uworld is pretty money. That being said, there were a few WTF? questions on each NBME I've taken, so kaplan is good prep for that.

Big day in 10 days, time to buckle down.
 
since i have only 2 weeks of dedicated study time for step 1,which qbank(usmlerx or kaplan) is worth to buy for 1 year and use it during year 2?
btw,my curriculum is organ system based so thinking of review each system using 1st aid and qbank after each system.
is clinical rotation help on step 1 since i have several clinical rotation at the end of my preclinical phase?or else i will take the exam before clinical rotation
 
since i have only 2 weeks of dedicated study time for step 1,which qbank(usmlerx or kaplan) is worth to buy for 1 year and use it during year 2?
btw,my curriculum is organ system based so thinking of review each system using 1st aid and qbank after each system.
is clinical rotation help on step 1 since i have several clinical rotation at the end of my preclinical phase?or else i will take the exam before clinical rotation

I used kaplan during the year and Uworld during dedicated study time, which I recommend. The good thing about buying Uworld for a eyar though is that they let you reset subscriptionf of longer then 6mo while kaplan doesn't, which is a huge PITA if you try to do a second pass.

I would take the exam before clinicals if i were you. You won't have much time to study on rotations and all those little facts that you dont use on the wards will dribble out of your brain.
 
really appreciate ur advice.
Uworld is too expensive for me subscribe for at least 6 months
do u think kaplan qbank will more benefit to both my medical school exam and step 1 compared to usmlerx?
 
really appreciate ur advice.
Uworld is too expensive for me subscribe for at least 6 months
do u think kaplan qbank will more benefit to both my medical school exam and step 1 compared to usmlerx?

For general medical school, I think kaplan will serve you better as the explanations will foster good understanding and chances are that the first aid bullet points that rx teaches you won't be too effective on actual med school exams. I think Kaplan for school year and World during studying (as DoctwoB recommended) would be a pretty good idea. Rx is nice to add but if you just can't afford it, just use first aid.
 
I know it's been said many times, but I just have to say thanks again for taking the time to post this. I thought it was very beneficial.
 
For general medical school, I think kaplan will serve you better as the explanations will foster good understanding and chances are that the first aid bullet points that rx teaches you won't be too effective on actual med school exams. I think Kaplan for school year and World during studying (as DoctwoB recommended) would be a pretty good idea. Rx is nice to add but if you just can't afford it, just use first aid.

thank you.

hmm, might as well ask a question:

Here's what I'm doing:
1) studying a topic (ex: neuro) in first aid
2) doing RX questions on a specific sub-topic (ex: Neuro, Pathology). This helps me learn the material, recognize patterns, pick up minutia, etc. etc. I also annotate my first aid along the way.
3) Then I'll do world on the same topic (ex: Neuro, Pathology). End up getting high 70's- low 80s.

Rinse, repeat.

Good idea? Bad idea?

My exam is in mid-late june.
 
I know it's been a while since this post was made, but it has helped me out greatly.
Just wanted to say, "Thank you!!!"
 
Why is it a pain in the ass to do a second pass of Uworld without resetting? I haven't bought it yet so I don't know about the interface.

And is it necessary to do that second pass? I simply don't have that kind of coin to shell out
 
Why is it a pain in the ass to do a second pass of Uworld without resetting? I haven't bought it yet so I don't know about the interface.

And is it necessary to do that second pass? I simply don't have that kind of coin to shell out

You can reset it if you buy a subscription of 6 months and over. I am few weeks away from my test and gonna do a second pass, the first pass took forever because of reading long explanation. I am doing it to build stamina for test and review the material, since I began the uworld back only a few months ago, I haven't seen some of the questions in a long time.

Btw hope you are at least enjoying your summer because its really the last one you will have. Also second year gives you enough time to do board studying if aren't trying to get all A's in classes.
 
You can reset it if you buy a subscription of 6 months and over. I am few weeks away from my test and gonna do a second pass, the first pass took forever because of reading long explanation. I am doing it to build stamina for test and review the material, since I began the uworld back only a few months ago, I haven't seen some of the questions in a long time.

Btw hope you are at least enjoying your summer because its really the last one you will have. Also second year gives you enough time to do board studying if aren't trying to get all A's in classes.

Hey thanks for your response. I don't really want to pay for the 6 month subscription though...am I going to regret this? Lol
 
Hey thanks for your response. I don't really want to pay for the 6 month subscription though...am I going to regret this? Lol

Most step 1 takers don't even go through uworld once let alone twice. Time should be the major issue, not money.

IF you have the time, go through it twice. The money, imo, is pittling compared to the potential or perceived benefit.
 
Most step 1 takers don't even go through uworld once let alone twice. Time should be the major issue, not money.

IF you have the time, go through it twice. The money, imo, is pittling compared to the potential or perceived benefit.

Yea money shouldn't be issue, uworld is on par with importance with first aid. Its a learning tool, I wish I had started it earlier and spent more time on explanations like I did during dedicated period.

GTP, also remember you also get year long kaplan qbank access from school. So essentially you are only buying one qbank yourself and you get discount if you can get a group of classmates to buy with you, its like 10-15% I think.
 
Anyone find Rx just as difficult if not harder than uworld? my uworld average is around 80-85% and my Rx average is like mid-high 70s.
 
It can be difficult at times because they ask for specific info. Uworld is the one that really counts so your ok.

Thanks wonderboy. Well it's true that our school gives us Kaplan for free. But im using gt. By the time you add usmlerx, combank and comquest, it really adds up.

So it's interesting that you said you wish you started Uworld earlier. 6 months was not early enough? Fml lol.

My plan was to use Kaplan and gt during second year with classes. Maybe Pathoma and fa over our 5 week winter break and our two week spring break.

I don't know if I can Possibly fit in Uworld during ms2. What do you think? I didn't want to pay for it and then realize that I didn't have time for it.

Everytime I think I've made a decision about this subject matter, someone else changes my mind.
 
You can do uworld twice for free by marking all the questions the first time around, and then only doing marked questions for your second go around. Annoying, but saves you $$.
 
Thanks wonderboy. Well it's true that our school gives us Kaplan for free. But im using gt. By the time you add usmlerx, combank and comquest, it really adds up.

So it's interesting that you said you wish you started Uworld earlier. 6 months was not early enough? Fml lol.

My plan was to use Kaplan and gt during second year with classes. Maybe Pathoma and fa over our 5 week winter break and our two week spring break.

I don't know if I can Possibly fit in Uworld during ms2. What do you think? I didn't want to pay for it and then realize that I didn't have time for it.

Everytime I think I've made a decision about this subject matter, someone else changes my mind.

Well I bought it in jan and tried doing it, but then we had a renal module and most of the class failed CS. So I had to pay attention to school for a few weeks to make sure I wasn't in danger of failing. Especially as the semester goes on you pay less attention to school, so if you have a good buffer, meaning you get good grades in the beginning you can kind of ignore school in the latter half of the semester.

I think you will be fine if you do it later on, you seem to be on top off things schoolwise. Just get a plan and stick to it. But also be aware that others around you in the class will be doing uworld thru out the year, don't let that cause anxiety, lol. Everyone has their own little plan to tackle the boards, just stick to yours and put in the time, you will be fine.
 
Well I bought it in jan and tried doing it, but then we had a renal module and most of the class failed CS. So I had to pay attention to school for a few weeks to make sure I wasn't in danger of failing. Especially as the semester goes on you pay less attention to school, so if you have a good buffer, meaning you get good grades in the beginning you can kind of ignore school in the latter half of the semester.

I think you will be fine if you do it later on, you seem to be on top off things schoolwise. Just get a plan and stick to it. But also be aware that others around you in the class will be doing uworld thru out the year, don't let that cause anxiety, lol. Everyone has their own little plan to tackle the boards, just stick to yours and put in the time, you will be fine.

Any advice on things I can do now to prepare myself for cs in three weeks? My strategy in the past has been to annihilate the first two exams in every course and then perform average on the final.

Maybe I should buy uworld in December around the 5 week break.
 
You can do uworld twice for free by marking all the questions the first time around, and then only doing marked questions for your second go around. Annoying, but saves you $$.

What's the interface for marking questions and then reviewing them vs a real reset? Ie Won't it show you the answers though, defeating the purpose?
 
Yea money shouldn't be issue, uworld is on par with importance with first aid. Its a learning tool, I wish I had started it earlier and spent more time on explanations like I did during dedicated period.

GTP, also remember you also get year long kaplan qbank access from school. So essentially you are only buying one qbank yourself and you get discount if you can get a group of classmates to buy with you, its like 10-15% I think.

I just looked on the website and didn't see anything like this. Are the discounts only offered at specific times?
 
I just looked on the website and didn't see anything like this. Are the discounts only offered at specific times?

Someone in our class is organizing it, we have like 50+ people interested. I really haven't seen them offer discount because they really don't need to.

For CS I tried studying for it like every other class and it was pointless. The amount of info is too great, so I focused on Path, pharm and board studying. I would leave CS until last week, at times I left it till the last day, haha. I did alright though.


Cs will suck up your time so much and its not worth the time unless you want an A which really isn't worth it in the long run because you want to spend that time doing board studying. And the review sheet Dr. C gives you are pointless because it might as well just say "know everything". If it was a topic I was unfamiliar with, I would just download the lecture and stream at 1.5 The first two modules are easy and will help you adjust your studying, cardio is the first real module.
 
What's the interface for marking questions and then reviewing them vs a real reset? Ie Won't it show you the answers though, defeating the purpose?

No, you won't see the answers. For your second pass, create question blocks with only "marked" questions (your choices include "marked", "unmarked", "incorrect", etc). If you don't mark them again the second time through, you will end up seeing every question only twice. Does that make sense?
 
No, you won't see the answers. For your second pass, create question blocks with only "marked" questions (your choices include "marked", "unmarked", "incorrect", etc). If you don't mark them again the second time through, you will end up seeing every question only twice. Does that make sense?

This makes sense. Thank you. However, what's stopping people from just marking everything and using that system to repeat Uworld without paying for it?
 
Someone in our class is organizing it, we have like 50+ people interested. I really haven't seen them offer discount because they really don't need to.

For CS I tried studying for it like every other class and it was pointless. The amount of info is too great, so I focused on Path, pharm and board studying. I would leave CS until last week, at times I left it till the last day, haha. I did alright though.


Cs will suck up your time so much and its not worth the time unless you want an A which really isn't worth it in the long run because you want to spend that time doing board studying. And the review sheet Dr. C gives you are pointless because it might as well just say "know everything". If it was a topic I was unfamiliar with, I would just download the lecture and stream at 1.5 The first two modules are easy and will help you adjust your studying, cardio is the first real module.

Wow. This is super scary. How bad can this damn cs class really be? Can you compare the amount of material with other courses? Was it worse than anatomy - content wise?
 
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