Originally posted by saimabean5:
•I'm taking Extended Physics II (5cr), Systems Physiology, and Genetics (4cr) and a religion class. Also im doing a lot volunteering and research. Plus ill be studying for the april mcat. I hope thats do-able in that i can get an A in all those classes and still have somewhat of a social life, and not get burned out. To those who took a lot of sciences classes did u get A's and how did u get them along w/ studying for mcats? 😕•
I did pretty well in my science classes. If you want A's, you have to put in the study time. I was in a similar situation to you in that I did a lot of extracurricular stuff at the same time. The secret is learning to budget your time. If you can do that (and this is a personal thing which only you can do, i.e. looking at your schedule, deciding when you have time to spare to study, etc), then I think you'll be okay. I'm a math major as I said, and personally I think that the premed sciences are much easier than math classes. If I could choose between straight memorization (premed science) and math, I would take the science stuff any day. That's not to say that the sciences weren't challenging; I found ochem and biochem pretty tough because of the amount of material and to some extent the problem-solving involved.
Another thing you should do is study a lot (at least as much as you need to, and I prefer to know the material as thoroughly as possible). Especially for ochem, I would start studying two weeks before the exam, and I would study a lot. I mean a lot, like five or six hours at a time, usually in the evenings, and this was a typical amount of studying for me. If you cram, not only is it harder to do well on exams (at least for me), but you don't retain the information well and this may come back to haunt you (i.e. at MCAT time).
Speaking of the MCAT, I didn't take it during the school year; I took it the summer after my sophomore year. I did this for two reasons: I had just finished organic and so it was fresher in my mind, and for the reason that I could devote much more time to studying for the MCAT. Unless you're superman with a 12 credit load, I don't see why any sensible person would take the MCAT in April while attempting to balance MCAT studying with studying for premedical sciences (assuming, of course, that the student isn't studying precisely what the MCAT tests at the same time that (s)he's covering it in school)