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Hi Everyone!
I'm a M1 and I just took my exam this Tuesday and afterwards thought I did well--at most 10 or so questions wrong. I got my score back and I got 20 wrong (about 83% or HP). I have yet to see my exam but I am worried.
First of all, I studied quite a bit--kept up with my lectures each day and such. I don't really go to class as we have audio lectures and I use videos online to supplement The main reason I don't go to class is because I can't concentrate during big lecture--whether it's because the prof was talking too slow and I wander off or whatever reason, I lose more than 50% of the lecture if I go. So I go to the library and such and listen to lecture audios, videos and notes.
I workout everyday to clear my head and I spent a lot of time with my family (I'm living at home) and teach my 10 yr old brother swimming and tennis for an hour each day. My point here is I don't feel like I don't have time for other things because I do spend a lot of time outside of med school.
My study method is definitely very different from undergrad--I crammed like most people before exams. I realized I can't do that with med school but it didn't seem to work so well. I feel that the more I study, the lower grades I get (granted it's only been one exam). That is not to say I knew everything forward and back--I know I didn't and I know Glands tripped me up big time, among all others that I don't know yet. I also know, after talking with some fellow students, that I probably didn't read carefully--I have a habit of skimming and not reading directions and a friend of mine told me that some of the professors have a tendency to give partially right answers followed by wrong answers.
So for my future studies, I obviously have to know the material much better--understand not only the concepts and pathways but also every DETAILS (if not for USMLE then at least for the school tests). What is also different this year is that I actually feel the pressure of getting good grades--never felt that before. My scholarship depends on my class grade (HP and above so I'm barely staying afloat). I would like any suggestions on how to deal with this please! And also, what would you suggest that I do differently in terms of studying?
Thank you very much and sorry I wrote so much!
Best,
DumboMD
I'm a M1 and I just took my exam this Tuesday and afterwards thought I did well--at most 10 or so questions wrong. I got my score back and I got 20 wrong (about 83% or HP). I have yet to see my exam but I am worried.
First of all, I studied quite a bit--kept up with my lectures each day and such. I don't really go to class as we have audio lectures and I use videos online to supplement The main reason I don't go to class is because I can't concentrate during big lecture--whether it's because the prof was talking too slow and I wander off or whatever reason, I lose more than 50% of the lecture if I go. So I go to the library and such and listen to lecture audios, videos and notes.
I workout everyday to clear my head and I spent a lot of time with my family (I'm living at home) and teach my 10 yr old brother swimming and tennis for an hour each day. My point here is I don't feel like I don't have time for other things because I do spend a lot of time outside of med school.
My study method is definitely very different from undergrad--I crammed like most people before exams. I realized I can't do that with med school but it didn't seem to work so well. I feel that the more I study, the lower grades I get (granted it's only been one exam). That is not to say I knew everything forward and back--I know I didn't and I know Glands tripped me up big time, among all others that I don't know yet. I also know, after talking with some fellow students, that I probably didn't read carefully--I have a habit of skimming and not reading directions and a friend of mine told me that some of the professors have a tendency to give partially right answers followed by wrong answers.
So for my future studies, I obviously have to know the material much better--understand not only the concepts and pathways but also every DETAILS (if not for USMLE then at least for the school tests). What is also different this year is that I actually feel the pressure of getting good grades--never felt that before. My scholarship depends on my class grade (HP and above so I'm barely staying afloat). I would like any suggestions on how to deal with this please! And also, what would you suggest that I do differently in terms of studying?
Thank you very much and sorry I wrote so much!
Best,
DumboMD