Some Scheduling Advice Needed...

  • Thread starter Thread starter HCHopeful
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HCHopeful

Hey everybody, I will be a Junior this semester, and I have made the decision to take the current MCAT on January 23, 2015 (the last date available). I attend a Liberal Arts school, so I must fulfill certain requirements in terms of classes. I have signed up for 15 credit hours for the fall, and the schedule looks like this:

Organic Chemistry (4 credits): Monday, Wednesday, Friday 12:00-12:50/Lab Thursday 10:00-12:50
Medical Anatomy and Physiology (4 credits): Monday, Wednesday, Friday 1:00-1:50/Lab Tuesday 9:00-11:50
Intro to Computers (2 credits): Wednesday 8:00-9:50
Intro to Philosophy (3 credits): Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00-11:50
Intro to Music (2 credits): Monday, Wednesday 2:00-2:50

My school also has what is called a "J-Term." This is a 3-week period in January when I student takes one class for 5 days a week (generally three hours a day) or participates in an internship or program of some sort. For example, my first J-Term was spent fulfilling my Psychology requirement, and my last one was spent doing an internship in a hospital.

This J-Term, I plan on being included in the MCAT/DAT study class our college has put together. This will afford all of January to adequately prepare.

In terms of time preparing for the MCAT, it looks a little something like this. I will be finished with classes on the 11th of December, so 8-hour-a-day studying will commence from there. That is essentially 1.33 months of studying. As it is with my current schedule, I have planned 18 hours a week to study during the fall semester. I began reviewing the Kaplan books around four weeks ago and have finished the General Chemistry and Physics books. I should point out that I didn't do anything more than read the chapters once and finish the practice questions at the end. There were no supplementary questions or passages of any sort. I am only trying to shake of the dust in each subject before cracking down.

I want to iterate that I have no intention of scoring a 35+ on my MCAT. My current GPA is a 3.89 with a 3.93 in the sciences. I only wish to get in to UNMC and am a Nebraska resident. Having said this, my goal is a 30.

Before studying of any sort, I took the AAMC Full-Length #3 and scored a 23 (6/10/7). I then took one a month later after reading the Kaplan General Chemistry book. I took the free online Princeton Review MCAT and received a 23 again. I am encouraged by the increase in the material I studied, as my Gen Chem percentage went up from a 48% to a 74%.

Having said all of this! Finally, to the point. Are my schedule and goals realistic? Can I expect a 7-point increase with my course load while maintaining a 4.0 this semester? I have no doubt in my ability to get a 4.0 in these courses, but I am wondering if I'll have enough time to increase my score to what I want. Obviously, I still have 6 months until my scheduled exam date, so getting started early is on my side.

Does anyone have any advice? I am considering dropping one or two classes to decrease the workload, but I am unsure if this is a good idea. Any input is appreciated. If you've read this far, I am proud of you, because this got a bit lengthy. Thanks everybody.
 
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Yes! You have PLENTY of time. Slow and steady is the key here since you will have classes for a lot of your study time. Set aside one day a week during the semester to just study the MCAT.
Your 7 point increase goal is totally doable! I took the Kaplan diag May 10 and got a 23 then took my first full length a month later about ~60% through content review and got a 33. Space out those full lengths until you're really confident with content review, but be sure to take them enough that you can see whether you're improving as you get closer to test day.
Good luck! 🙂
 
I have access to 3 FL Kaplan MCATs, so I will be spreading those out along with the 7 other AAMC FL's. I plan on reading through the Kaplan MCAT books and then taking one the week before classes start. Hopefully that will give me a bit of an idea of where I am. Thanks for the encouragement and advice. I really do appreciate it!
 
It's definitely possible. Keep in mind that Princeton tests are typically harder and their free diagnostics are made to pressure people into paying for their services. If you do a brief review of all of the content prior to your 1.33 months of studying, and then spend that time to really review the material that you are having trouble with (as well as taking as many practice tests as you can), I don't see any reason why you won't be able to hit a 30+. You seem to have a pretty solid foundation of the sciences from your sGPA, so it will just be a matter of memorizing all of the relevant content that will be on the test and applying that knowledge on the practice and actual tests. Good luck!
 
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