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Showing posts with label How to study. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to study. Show all posts

Friday, December 7, 2012

USMLE STUDY UPDATE

Ok, so a while back I said that I would be taking the Step 1 in December. I am now studying for a January test date. I reserve the right to change that based on my NBME practice exams that I am taking at the testing center. I am using a study schedule made out by Topher for my last six weeks of study. His blog is fantastic! I know the exam has changed a little since he took it, but the concepts are the same and most of the material is the same. Plus, it is a huge encouragement when I know that he made a 240/99.

My study materials, Goljan audio coupled with a little rapid review, First Aid Organ Systems, Kaplan for each subject (provided as part of my tuition) and the Qbank. Uworld Qbank. First Aid.

I took two months off between finishing my fifth semester and beginning my serious studying. I began reviewing all of biochem, slowly. I made my own notes and drew out pathways. I then went to Immuno, and then I kind of got off track and started bouncing around. I have come back together and I am studying all of cardiovascular including blood disorders, and continuing with the schedule that I mentioned above. I am also using my Kaplan Qbank to help guide me to where I need more review as well as my Uworld assessment. I have been annotating my first aid with everything. I plan to try to write out the notes that I need to review eliminating the stuff that I know I know. Maybe Ill just mark through them in the first aid so that I have a visual of my progress.

My biggest "aha" moments have been understanding material that seemed so foreign in my Medical classes. For instance, I had a terrible time learning cell signaling ("This is important, you better know this"). I didn't understand Gq, Gs, or corticosteroids vs hemorrhoids. Just kidding. But you get the point. It was incredibly difficult for me to understand. Now I completely, well almost, understand and I can tell you which drugs use which receptors and the cell signaling mechanism.

Another area when I thought I would never understand the material was ANS. I thought I would die before I ever understood it completely. I get it! (mostly).

There are many other areas where I can tell you that during the classes I struggled to make sense of it, and now it just all comes together and makes so much sense.

My advice is to take it slow (as slow as is possible in four weeks) and learn it well. You may not feel like you know it, but trust yourself. Do the end of chapter questions and review the material if you don't understand it. The best way to learn is to get questions wrong. Prepare well for your exams on the island, and you are preparing well for the Step 1. I haven't seen anything in the text books that wasn't covered at some point in my time on the island.

Others suggest making a schedule and sticking to it. I am trying, but it is very hard to study all day everyday. I am away from my family with another family who is a great support. They make dinner every night and I make my own breakfast. They do the dishes and clean the house, and buy the groceries-pretty much everything. I cannot emphasize enough that that it is exactly what you need. It is imperative to have your mind clear for studying.

I am cutting it short, but I hope you can glean a little information from this short entry.

Until next time,
Amy


Friday, August 12, 2011

My Advice: an oxymoron

So as this semester comes to a close I have been thinking about how I could have studied harder, better, more, and made better grades. I think about what I have learned and worry a little about how close I am to taking Step 1. In my examination of myself I have realized that I rely too heavily on others advice and opinions of certain classes with respect to their level of difficulty and what books to buy and how to study for them. The fact is that I am not those people that I am asking. While I greatly respect their opinions it is all too often not my experience.

So this is the part where my post is an oxymoron. I am about to give you advice to not take others advice. Do with it what you may.

You must know yourself first. Then use what others tell you to your benefit. For instance, I am an auditory learner. If someone will explain a concept to me and I can understand the concept and tell it back to them I will never forget it. I can read the same concept and it is never internalized, and pictures are worse. But if I ask a visual learner what book to buy or use, they will probably recommend a book with great illustrations and less words. That book will be not only difficult for me to read, but it will be very frustrating for me to study. I learned that this semester.

When you are researching which books to buy, thing about how you learn best. If you are asking an upperclassman which books to buy then you should know how they learn best and if you learn the same way. Otherwise their opinion is, for all intensive purposes, useless to you. I have learned this the hard way.

What works for others may not work for you and you have to know yourself well enough to know what you need to make the material "stick" for you.

Many students have very useful advice on what to buy and how to study. I am not saying don't listen to them at all, I am saying use it to your advantage and not to your detriment. If you find that a text book recommendation is not working for you, move on, find something else.

If you need to rewrite your notes for them to make sense then do, I would advice you to use your time understanding the material and reading it rather than writing a bunch of stuff. If notecards work for you then make them, they generally only work for me if I am looking at the notecard.

I love highlighting text. I love going back and reading what I have highlighted to see why I highlighted it. I understand it better that way, but that doesn't mean that it is the best way for you to study for medical school.

My gibberish is getting old, now and I hope that I have driven home the point. KNOW YOURSELF! Know what works for you. DO IT!!!

Best of luck to all the new students arriving at UMHS!

Until next time,

Amy Jones