- Joined
- Jul 3, 2006
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- 78
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Ok, step 3 really isn't too bad. I was nervous because I didn't study much at all, but I'd say most of us could walk in there after only reading the "orientation" material in First Aid and still pass the thing.
There were a ton of questions that would never be found in USMLE World or First Aid. A lot of questions that patients might commonly ask you but that no text book would ever cover. At first you think, "what the hell is this." But with careful reading of the prompt and then by eliminating the obviously wrong answer choices, you work your way to the right answer.
It doesn't feel like your studying has paid off, but you get to your goal anyway, which is a passing score.
Test-taking skills and common sense will get you a long way. Same holds true for the CCS section.
Two months, two weeks, two pencils (prep for step 1, step 2, step 3).
There were a ton of questions that would never be found in USMLE World or First Aid. A lot of questions that patients might commonly ask you but that no text book would ever cover. At first you think, "what the hell is this." But with careful reading of the prompt and then by eliminating the obviously wrong answer choices, you work your way to the right answer.
It doesn't feel like your studying has paid off, but you get to your goal anyway, which is a passing score.
Test-taking skills and common sense will get you a long way. Same holds true for the CCS section.
Two months, two weeks, two pencils (prep for step 1, step 2, step 3).