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So we can talk about all things MCAT 2015.
Just registered too!
Just registered too!
Yea and I think we're the last batch that is considered to be the firsts for the new MCAT, meaning our scores are determined solely on our performance on THIS exam and not a consensus average %correct per section from prior exams.
This means july onwards will likely be equalized according to data on average %correct per section from april/may/june, but we wont. I think this might be a huge advantage.
What do you by "for July"? Am I missing something major here.....
I actually read somewhere on the AAMC website that scores from earlier exams will be higher than scores from later exams. Do you think June counts as an earlier exam?
I have no motivation to study whatsoever. On that note... does anyone have a good list of formulas I can steal? I've made my own but I'm afraid I may be missing some.
I actually read somewhere on the AAMC website that scores from earlier exams will be higher than scores from later exams. Do you think June counts as an earlier exam?
Gotcha. I thought you meant for some application deadline or something that I was totally unaware of. Had a mini heart attackIm saying we will get our percentiles back in time to make a decision if we want to take July test. which is better than waiting until the end of July to see scores and then have to enroll in august and not be scored until september.... its a huge advantage of the early test
Yeah. This.
Does anyone know how our scores are calculated? I know April set the bench mark, but does it go question by question?
Like, if we have a really hard PS section and we all score poorly on it (raw score), then are we disadvantaged compared to those who had an easier PS section? Or is each individual question weighted in its own way?
I have no motivation to study whatsoever. On that note... does anyone have a good list of formulas I can steal? I've made my own but I'm afraid I may be missing some.
Ditto.
I made one I can scan in, but it may be hard to follow as I didn't really label any of it. Still interested?
Also, does the motion of an electron in an electric field between electrodes differ from the action between two plates of a capacitor? AAMC practice pack has a question that says the electron will accelerate towards the anode in the electrode, but another question will accelerate towards the positive end of the parallel plate capacitor.
Figured it out!This may be a silly question but I just want to make sure i'm interpreting the score charts correctly. When it says a score of 500 is equal to the 51 percentile and then 501 is 58 (hypothetical, I can't remember exactly what they correspond to) does this mean that you have a score of 500 from the 51-57 percentile? Or does it mean that from 51-58 you have a score of 501?
Thank you in advance 🙂
Do tellFigured it out!
It's the upper bound limitDo tell
So anything above the upper bound would be a higher score?It's the upper bound limit
From my understanding according to the new chart a 500, for example, corresponds to the 51st percentile and 499 is the 47th. This means that scores from the 48-51 are a 500.So anything above the upper bound would be a higher score?
51-57=500 58-61= 501This may be a silly question but I just want to make sure i'm interpreting the score charts correctly. When it says a score of 500 is equal to the 51 percentile and then 501 is 58 (hypothetical, I can't remember exactly what they correspond to) does this mean that you have a score of 500 from the 51-57 percentile? Or does it mean that from 51-58 you have a score of 501?
Thank you in advance 🙂
I'm sorry but your saying its the minimum percentile you need? Most people are saying its the maximum. Sorry i'm just hearing more than one thing.....51-57=500 58-61= 501
I made one I can scan in, but it may be hard to follow as I didn't really label any of it. Still interested?
Also, does the motion of an electron in an electric field between electrodes differ from the action between two plates of a capacitor? AAMC practice pack has a question that says the electron will accelerate towards the anode in the electrode, but another question will accelerate towards the positive end of the parallel plate capacitor.
look at the scale like a distribution. 500. Is 50th percentile. 50 will be above and 50 will be below. It represents the minimum required to obtain that score.I'm sorry but your saying its the minimum percentile you need? Most people are saying its the maximum. Sorry i'm just hearing more than one thing.....
I'd like to check it out. Also, that does sound confusing about the electron direction. Can you give the full question that says electrons travel to the anode?
I know the exam Friday/Saturday is gonna be different. I'm just hoping neither group has to deal w a brutal PS section, since the consensus for May was that theirs was not difficult.
It mentions a vacuum photodiode, so maybe that's why?
Based on the problems that i've seen from kaplan and AAMC, i don't think we'll need to know any specifics about those processes. Knowing overall picture and overall products and reactants will be enough i think. For instance what would happen to gluconeogenesis if a big meal was just eaten. When does beta oxidation occur? Those sorts of things. That's what i'm prepping for, at least.
Btw, was this question from the AAMC?
Can we all just take a minute to acknowledge the fact that we are all almost finished?!?!?
All kidding aside, I think the pysch/soc is going to be really hard lol
I feel like part of the reason that section sucks so bad is because it's at the end when we are all worn out!
I feel like part of the reason that section sucks so bad is because it's at the end when we are all worn out!
I dont mind the psych! It can get a little tricky though with some of the extremely similar terms!
And I retook the AAMC FL today too. Only missed 1 in each section...Definitely remembered some answers, but its definitely good and it felt awesome to go through it again. I'm realizing how simple all of the questions are...it just comes down to if you can apply the basic knowledge we all know.