Created a new account just to post this...thought I would give back to the community.
I'm a resident that has never had the patience to be a good test taker. Luckily, despite my low scores, I'm good in other ways and managed to secure a spot at a good program in a highly competitive specialty despite my scores. Anyways, here's my background:
Step I: 196 (studied a week)
Step II: 185 (studied 3 days)
Studied hard for Step III -- was stressed since Step 2 was only 185 and people tend to do worse on step 3 than step 2, and passing for step 3 was 190.
So...at the start of a 3 month period during my PGY-2 year while on call on weekends (we take home call) and during evenings I skimmed over Kaplan's Master the Boards. It was low yield for me, because I didn't remember everything -- my eyes would glaze over while reading. About 1 month in, I started panicking because I wasn't retaining anything...chucked the MTB since I wasn't getting anything out of it and did ALL of Kaplan Qbank: final percentage was: 50% (467 correct, 456 incorrect, 3 omitted (not sure how I accid. skipped them) -- all timed, random, first time. Didn't have time to repeat.
I also then did UW Qbank in about the last 6 weeks or so; by the end I was doing 6-8 x48 question blocks per day on the weekends to catch up and finish the whole bank. Final percentage was 55% (all random, new, untimed, 48 question blocks: 743 (55%) correct, 615 (45%) incorrect, 2 (0%) omitted) -- I did ALL the questions, finishing about 2 days before the actual exam. About 3 weeks before the exam, I also paid for the CCS on UW, because I started getting stressed (reading all the posts from FMGs and how they fail on CCS (google "usmle ccs experiences" and you'll get all the FMG postings...) was stressing me out, even though I am an AMG and went to a top 10 medical school). So, I also did all the cases (both simulated and the printed out cases) once, finishing them over a 1 week period, finishing 2 weeks before the exam.
So...onto the actual exam...first day I had 2 hard blocks; felt uneasy about them, but didn't think about it anymore, as I knew what was done was done. I spent the evening reviewing ALL the CCS simulated cases on UW quickly over a 4 hour period. Was stressed because I had forgotten all the little things all over again. Went to bed at 1 am and woke up at 6 am the next morning. Day 2 was easier. Felt like I did pretty well on the blocks. There were a lot of specialty-relevant questions too, so that helped.
CCS actually felt easy to me. 11/12 cases were from UW, and the 1 that wasn't was pretty easy to manage (it was an orthopedics case and pretty basic). Most cases, however, ended up ending just 1-2 minutes before the max time (i.e. the "endscreen" popped up at around 16-17 minutes of exam time...I think 18 minutes was the max). So, I was worried that maybe I was taking too long, as most people (if you go by those people that get 260s on this forum and know internal medicine well) were saying that that their cases ended 7-8 minutes after starting. Still, I couldn't think of anything majorly bad that I had done (well I screwed up one part and sent the guy accidentally to the ER from the office as he was getting better, but I quickly recovered and sent him back to the office -- I hit the wrong button in all my nervousness....).
When I came out, I felt that I had "probably passed" but was worried that I might not have passed. Based on my UW score going into the test, I was expecting a score of around 205. I never did do the simulated test since I didn't wanna be stressed out if I didn't do well on it.
Also, I took Step 3 one week after my inservice, so I did spend a bit of time studying for my inservice during the last 2 months or so.
Final score: 194 - was kinda bummed I didn't break 200...(so I didn't do as well as I expected but I guess I had enough of a buffer to bomb the questions section of the test...see below for how I think I actually passed). So, I think that posting in this thread that says a 55% on UW is the "bare minumum" to ensure a pass is pretty dead on:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showpost.php?p=13720244&postcount=444
I had scores that overlapped w/ borderline in all areas except for the the areas relevant to my specialty -- for those areas, I was well above the borderline. Surprisingly, however, I did the best on the part that I thought I would have the most trouble w/...the CCS (again, reading all those "USMLE STEP 3 experiences" threads on ValueMD and Prep4USMLE by people that failed and are trying to pass the exam for the third or fourth time, etc can really stress you out...). In reality, I don't think you need to know the amount of minutiae on the CCS portion as you do on the discrete questions portion of the exam. For me, everything was really bread and butter and similar to what I saw on UW. There were a few curves...i.e. a person might have breast cancer as well as an infection; so, you needed to know how to work up both things.
I think I would have failed if not for CCS, actually. I totally rocked CCS and had an asterisk on the right side. Anyway, that's just my humble story. I was really stressed since I was worried that if I had not passed, I would not have been promoted to PGY-3 in my program (since successful completion of USMLE step III is required by the GME office here in order to be promoted, and there have been residents that have been asked to leave because they didn't pass step III). Was also stressed since I only had one attempt to pass it (because I had procrastinated and put off the exam) before June 30 -- had I failed it, there wouldn't have been enough time to take and pass the exam before June 30.
Anyway, GLAD THAT IS BEHIND ME! Still kinda bummed I didn't break 200 on any of my USMLEs, but, hey, whatever...have to now worry about my specialty boards! LOL.
😍