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My USMLE Step 1 Advice (Score:

256)
Study Materials:

Kaplan videos and lecture notes for all subjects except Pathology.
Pathology: Pathoma videos and lectures + Goljan audio and Goljan
125 page transcript.
First Aid 2013.

References: (used on an as needed base for topics not understood


from study materials)

Goljan's Rapid Review of Pathology


BRS Physiology (Board Review Series)
Lippincott's Illustrated Reviews: Pharmacology
Google Images (seriously!!)
Others:
o Medscape, NEJM, Wikipedia

Question Banks:

USMLEWorld QBank: Online QBank for 5 months (3 months are


fair enough, however I had several interruptions so I subscribed for
2 extra months because I didn't finish my first pass in the first 3
months)
Kaplan QBank offline:
o Most of: Biochemistry and Genetics, Microbiology and
Immunology
o Few of: Pathophysiology, Pharmacology, Statistics
o None of: Pathology, Physiology, Anatomy, Embryology,
Histology and Behavioral)

NBMEs (CBSSA): All forms taken online.

Form 15: 18 October 2014


included.
Form 13: 26 October 2014
Form 16: 1 November 2014
Form 7: 12 November 2014

- (251) performance profile


- (254)
- (251)
- (254)

UWSA: online.

UWSA 2: 12 October 2014


- (257)
UWSA 1: 21 December 2014 (265)

Actual Step 1 Exam: 28 December 2014: (256) performance profile


included.

Timeline: I prefer not to mention this because it might be disappointing. I


wasted too much time due to multiple interruptions during my preparation
plus a bulk of time wasted at the beginning, when I used large,
exhausting, low-yield resources until I read recent examinees' experiences
(in this group) and followed them.
Tips and Advices
(The next part summarizes in points what I learned during my preparation;
my mistakes and ways to avoid them in my opinion)

Advices Regarding Study Materials:

1. Before starting, choose among the study materials mentioned in the


various experiences in this group. They are more than enough. Big
text books are never good for exam preparation. Using Lange for
physiology or Lippincott's illustrated reviews for biochemistry and
pharmacology are probably terrible ideas, unless you have done
them already during coursework.
2. The choice of your study resources should only be based on your
own personal preferences. Pick up a resource you feel comfortable
with, a resource that you feel more friendly. Avoid studying from a
resource that you don't like or can't handle just because it has more
recommendations. A good example is pathology. I've read many
experiences (in this group) about people who scored 250+, and
each one of them studied pathology from a single resource whether
Kaplan, Goljan or Pathoma. So pick up the one that "appeals" to
you the most and "master" it.
3. Avoid using more than one study material per subject. If you use
other materials for reference only, that is fine. Mastering 100% of
the material in Pathoma alone is better and more time efficient - in
my opinion - than accomplishing 90% of Pathoma and 75% of Goljan
(as in my case).
4. In your first read, start with foundation subjects (physiology,
anatomy, immunology, biochemistry). Leave pathology till the end.
During your revision (i.e. your second read), start with your weakest
subjects and topics first.
5. QBooks (I am not talking about QBanks here) could be used best if
any only during your first or second read. Kaplan QBank, First Aid
Q&A and Robbins Review of Pathology are all good QBooks to aid
the consolidation of important concepts. But they are NOT good at
all to prepare you for the actual exam. To be honest, I barely used
any of these.
6. Do not even try to memorize anything during your first read. Your
first read has only one purpose: to understand the concepts. Spend
time on understanding rather than memorization. Refer to text

books, lectures, YouTube, Google Images, Wikipedia, Medscape,


NEJM, etc. to understand any concept that seems hard.
7. Get the First Aid book. Regardless of whether you like this book or
not, it is a treasure. I didn't like it myself. I used it as a review tool,
as a study guide and as a curriculum reference.

Advices Regarding Online Question Banks (USMLEWorld)

1. QBanks especially USMLEWorld focus on high-yield concepts


tested on the real exam. They make you able to "highlight"
important principles and focus on them while doing a second
reading of the syllabus. Without starting solving QBanks, you would
never know what to focus on. So start solving UW early; after your
first read if possible.
2. When solving question banks online, you should do them at least
twice. Please do your first pass in a subject-wise (physiology,
pathology, microbiology, etc.) rather than system-wise (neurology,
cardiovascular, gastroenterology) manner. My first pass was
system-wise and I really suffered because I had to learn new
materials about every single subject in each test block I solved, so I
felt messed up rather than focused on one subject at a time).
3. USMLEWorld QBank is a MUST. If you are doing only one QBank
(which is more than enough by the way) it is USMLEWorld for sure.
4. How to study the UW QBank is what makes a big difference - in my
opinion. You must master the contents of this bank. To do this, for
every question you solve you should:
know why the correct choice is correct.
know why all the other choices are incorrect.
read the question stem itself and get used to the "key
words" and how to interpret what they mean in a flash.
For example, in the exam they are less likely to tell you: "the
patient is in shock", but they are more likely to say: "blood
pressure is 90/60 and pulse is 120".
They are less likely to say: "the patient is complaining of
proximal muscle weakness" but are more likely to say: "the
patient finds it difficult to get up from a chair or comb his
hair".
read other information provided in the explanation of each
question even if they seem "irrelevant" and have nothing to
do with the concept of the question.
Solve full blocks (46 question per block) in a "timed" setting
to practice timing.
Memorize by hard in my opinion the ranges of normal
values for the following lab values. These lab values are
provided in the exam of course, but it would be really timewasting to look for these values, especially if you are looking
for two or more values:
i. Glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, bilirubin, albumin.
ii. Sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, calcium, phosphate.
iii. pH, PO2, PCO2.
iv. Bleeding time, platelet time, PT, PTT

5. So to summarize: Do UW QBank two or three times. First in a


subject-wise, then system-wise, then random and read thoroughly
the explanation of each question.
6. If you are doing other question banks as well, remember this rule
again: studying 100% of questions on UW is much better than doing
80% of the questions of two or more QBanks. I recommend using
other QBanks only to repair certain defects. In my opinion, if solving
more QBanks is going to distract you from USMLEWorld, please
don't do it. Ensure your mastery of UW then do any of the other
banks you want.
7. If you are that kind of person who likes to take down notes from the
QBank, please, try NOT to do it during your first pass. You are likely
to encounter these facts you are writing down over and over again
and they would "stick" to your memory while doing more questions,
so by the end of the first pass you would end up with notes that you
are already familiar with. Take down notes during your second pass,
writing down things that did not "stick" to your mind during the first
pass. This will make the notes shorter and well organized. I took
notes during my first pass, and ended up throwing them away and
taking down new notes during my second pass!
8. No one is perfect, so don't try to be so. Start practicing USMLEWorld
even if you don't feel you are fully covering the syllabus. The QBank
will repair your defects.
When I say you should "master" the material, I don't mean you
shouldn't miss anything. We all miss things. Just don't neglect
concepts or lessons that seem boring.

Advices Regarding NBMEs and Real Exam

1. The best predictor of your actual score is a "consistent NBME


scoring". If you get two similar NBME online scores, that's your
most likely score if you take the real exam (in shaa' Allah).
2. Never engage in a discussion regarding an NBME question on this
group unless you have done it before. NBME is meant to assess your
actual level and their test forms are limited in number. Solving an
NBME test, which contains many questions that you have "seen"
and "discussed" before might overestimate your NBME performance
and give you a false high score.
3. This advice is intended for those who are anxious and get their
brains blocked sometimes. It worked somehow for me. If it doesn't
suit you, please ignore it. If you decide to use it, please start
applying this advice during your early online QBank practicing to
make sure it is OK for you and has no negative effects:
When you are confronted by a hard question, do not waste
time rereading it over and over again. Do not get driven to

despair just staring at the question wishing it didn't exist.


Decide quickly that this question is not doable now, make a
good hunch or even a random guess and pick up an answer,
then mark the question, and move to the next question.
When you are done with all questions in the test block, return
to your marked questions and try again. You will find out - in
most cases - that your brain figured out a good way to deal
with it.
Applying the above principle seems easy, but you must
ensure you have enough time to review all of your marked
questions. This depends greatly on how much time you spent
to decide to postpone solving this hard question and move
forward.
4. No matter how well prepared you are, you will make mistakes, even
silly mistakes, so don't demonize yourself if you discovered you
picked up wrong answers when it is too late. Do not let anything
bring you down, you still can score high. We want to minimize not
to eliminate our wrong answers. Always stay in focus. Always stay
in good mood during the exam.
5. The USMLE is meant to test your endurance. It is an 8-hour exam
with 322 different problems, each of which you have to decide a
correct response in less than two minutes. The USMLE is meant to
stress you out. So don't freak out; don't panic. The exam will seem
harder than you expect but you will do well with good preparation in
shaa Allah. There are always new experimental, hard questions that
do not affect your score but could freak you out for nothing.
When is it good time to panic? NEVER!
Always cheer up and keep moving forwards.

At the end, I wish you all the best for your preparation, your exam and
your life.
May Allah guide you.
Best Regards,
USMLE Step 1 Preparation Group Member

Dr. Karim Adel

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