Why is it important to take it easy the day before your test?

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auburnO5

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I plan on doing this because everyone says to do it, but why?

I often hear the metaphor used "would a marathon runner run 20 miles the day before a race?" but a "test" seems a little different.
 
I plan on doing this because everyone says to do it, but why?

I often hear the metaphor used "would a marathon runner run 20 miles the day before a race?" but a "test" seems a little different.
I say do what works for you. If doing nothing will make you jittery and more nervous the day before, who cares what "everyone else" will do. If reviewing a little will help you calm down and boost your confidence then do that. By now you should have taken enough exams to know what works for you and what doesn't.
 
Yeah, you have to do what works for you. The biggest thing is that you obviously do not want to exhaust yourself staying up late studying the night before an 8 hour exam like Step-I, but I don't see how studying some during the day could be a bad thing. Knowing myself, I will probably do some light studying in the morning, but try to get to bed by like 9:30 so I can get a full night's sleep. I plan on trying to keep a list of things I struggle with, so I may just give those things one more go at it the day before the exam to try to make them stick and then call it a day. I dunno. It'd be great to hear what people who took the exam did, and how they felt it impacted them.
 
I think I'll just try to make a couple of runs through the FA "rapid review" section and then go watch a movie or something.
 
lol, i remember back old days when i took mcats, i saw some student who were going to take step1 were molesting FA like crazy at prometric . People like these make me nervous when i see them at prometric.
 
I didn't. I crammed some of the stuff that required pure memorization like lysosomal storage diseases, etc. I can't remember if it helped, but I think it's a good strategy. I'm not particularly prone to freaking out though, so you've gotta do what you can handle.
 
I didn't. I crammed some of the stuff that required pure memorization like lysosomal storage diseases, etc. I can't remember if it helped, but I think it's a good strategy. I'm not particularly prone to freaking out though, so you've gotta do what you can handle.

Yeah, I'm with you there, I'll probably look over some last-minute crammable stuff the day before. I think it's a do no harm thing when you hear not to study the day before, if you're the type that freaks out before tests you're better off not hyperventilating and having a mental breakdown the day before or not being able to sleep and walking into an 8 hour test exhausted than the marginal gain (if any) you get from studying. If you're that kind of person, don't study the day before. I can't imagine it earning you more than a point or two higher at most. I'll end up studying because I'll feel guilty otherwise... :laugh:
 
I took it easy because at that point there was no way in hell I would be able to learn more or retain more with that extra day of studying. I didn't veg out and watch a movie though, I basically spent the day relaxing, and near the end of the day flipped through a couple of flash cards last minute and slept nice and early around 9 pm. Good times.
 
I took it easy because at that point there was no way in hell I would be able to learn more or retain more with that extra day of studying. I didn't veg out and watch a movie though, I basically spent the day relaxing, and near the end of the day flipped through a couple of flash cards last minute and slept nice and early around 9 pm. Good times.

That sounds nice, actually sounds great at this point. I think some light reading and flipping through flashcards on the couch would be preferable to me rather than just turning my brain off completely. I need that stuff on the tip of my tongue... 😛
 
I did a bit of both. I felt like not reviewing made me more anxious, so I did review some final must-knows and some of my more difficult topics/diseases (esp. crammable stuff). I did some of my marked questions as well. This actually helped me relax, because it kept me busy and made me feel like I was being productive. Seriously though I don't think it helped at all. Also, a large part of my day was spent just playing video games trying to make the day end as quickly as possible. Personally, both the light reviewing/questions/etc. and the video games helped me feel better, but I understand how reviewing might make some people stressed. Like RedFive says, each to his own. I think a good part of doing well in school/standardized tests is knowing yourself and what works for you.
 
I did a bit of both. I felt like not reviewing made me more anxious, so I did review some final must-knows and some of my more difficult topics/diseases (esp. crammable stuff). I did some of my marked questions as well. This actually helped me relax, because it kept me busy and made me feel like I was being productive.

That actually sounds fairly smart. I would reckon that perhaps going over marked questions (if you haven't done that already) + reviewing the lists of crammable info (e.g. AD vs AR diseases, rate-limiting enzymes, etc.) is solid, but not to make the day completely unproductive nor an actual intense study day.

One of my relatives is currently a third-year med student at HMS. He said he spent the day before in hyper-mode going through the entirety of FA (because he hadn't felt totally prepared [as if any of us would]). He also said that he was freaking out and got only about 5 hours of sleep the night before, and he did not do as well as he had wanted (he never told me his score, so that's open for interpretation). Hopefully a lesson learned.

When I take the Step at the end of the year, I'll probably take QuiQue2's advice.
 
My pharmacology professor said we should use the day before the test to review anti-microbials.

I did that too and it was helpful. I went through several drug sections actually, and it definitely helped me nail down a couple extra questions on the test.
 
I did that too and it was helpful. I went through several drug sections actually, and it definitely helped me nail down a couple extra questions on the test.

I agree. Just took the test today and reviewing micro, cardio, and autonomic pharm drugs really helped!
 
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