I have decided to study for the PCAT out of MCAT prep books since the exam is notoriously harder... I figure this will prepare me much better. I'd rather be overprepared than underprepared. I'm just going to cut out the physics portion and add on a quantitative study section.
A couple questions:
Has anyone used this method to study for the PCAT and how effective was it?
What should I do about studying for the math section?
As always, any feedback is greatly appreciated! 😀
I took the MCAT twice before taking the PCAT, so I used the books I bought for the MCAT to study for the PCAT. I got a 94 composite score.
😀
The MCAT just tests more about the subjects that the PCAT tests instead of testing more subjects. It's not like the MCAT tests a bunch of stuff about senior-level biochemistry, advanced genetics, etc. So, I found that studying for the MCAT really helped for the PCAT. Most of the science questions asked on the PCAT were referenced in my MCAT books.
Of course, the MCAT books won't prepare you for verbal and math. In addition, the biology section on the PCAT tends to ask more "trivia" questions where you have to know a random fact about something. I was asked which organism is human transmitted on the biology section of the PCAT. The MCAT would never ask that type of question. Also, the PCAT's biology section is slanted towards general biology and underclassmen biology courses whereas the MCAT has more in-depth genetics, physiology, and microbiology.
Basically, the MCAT is more difficult because of the depth and the passage-style questions. That is, the MCAT questions are mostly in the context of a PCAT reading comprehension-like passage where your answer depends on your ability to identify the concept being asked and apply it to the question and passage at hand. The PCAT doesn't "beat around the bush" where its questions tests your knowledge directly like "what is the equivalence point of this titration" and such.
So, studying for the PCAT with MCAT books won't hurt. In fact, I prefer MCAT books over the PCAT books because you'll review some background material that will help you remember the main concepts. You just have to get MCAT books that aren't overkill where you'll read about stuff that won't be on the PCAT. I recommend buying the Examkrackers books as I felt that the information on there wasn't too much overkill. Kaplan's MCAT book has too much information. Examkrackers' verbal reasoning book will really prepare you for the PCAT reading comprehension section. In addition, their "1001 questions" line of books provide practice on questions that are ironically more PCAT-like than MCAT-like. You then just have to find other guides for math and verbal.
🙂