News for Med School Applicants: The Princeton Review's Free "MCAT 2015: SNEAK PEEK" Guide Now Available Online
What many consider the toughest of all professional school admission exams the Medical College Admission Test is going to get tougher.
Students applying to med schools for admission fall 2015 or later (listen up, college sophomore premeds, that's you) will face a new MCAT. In spring 2015, the MCAT will be about 50% longer, have dozens of additional questions, and cover some subjects never before on the test while jettisoning others the test-makers consider dated.
But first-class aid for the new MCAT is now available from The Princeton Review. Its free "MCAT 2015: SNEAK PEEK" see it at www.princetonreview.com/mcatsneakpeek gives MCAT preppers everything they need to know to gear up for the new test. This multi-media, interactive tool features:
What many consider the toughest of all professional school admission exams the Medical College Admission Test is going to get tougher.
Students applying to med schools for admission fall 2015 or later (listen up, college sophomore premeds, that's you) will face a new MCAT. In spring 2015, the MCAT will be about 50% longer, have dozens of additional questions, and cover some subjects never before on the test while jettisoning others the test-makers consider dated.
But first-class aid for the new MCAT is now available from The Princeton Review. Its free "MCAT 2015: SNEAK PEEK" see it at www.princetonreview.com/mcatsneakpeek gives MCAT preppers everything they need to know to gear up for the new test. This multi-media, interactive tool features:
- Three videos: Key facts about the current MCAT and the major changes in the 2015 MCAT (and we mean major: this is the biggest overhaul of the test since 1991)
- Test content updates: Downloadable booklet including a rundown on which subjects are going into the test (and which courses to take to study up for them), and which are going out
- Two interactive modules powered exclusively by amplifier that build knowledge of the MCAT and skills to score well on it
- An MCAT 2015 practice test. This abbreviated, 2.5-hour test includes questions on the Behavioral Sciences content slated for the new test.