Your questions, answered here on the OldPreMeds Podcast. Ryan and Rich again dive into the forums over at OldPreMeds.org where they pull a question and deliver the answers right on to you.
Today, they discuss about the best resource for studying for the MCAT, what you need to do, and some things you need to consider to find your best resource.
Looking at retaking the MCAT with a 19 on the old exam and trying to avoid going to the Caribbean. What is the most useful resource for studying for the MCAT?
MCAT used to be a 3-part exam:
Biological sciences
Physical sciences
Verbal Reasoning
In 2015, MCAT now covers 4 sections:
Chemical and physical foundations for systems
Critical analysis and reasoning
Biological and biochemical foundations
Psychosocial and biologic foundations of behavior
What you need to do for the MCAT:
Rich's rule of thumb is to do 4-6 practice exams under realistic conditions in getting scores you're comfortable with before you take the actual exam.
Look at your finances. It could cost $2,000-$3,000 to take a course.
You may self-study (if you have good habits and can be disciplined) and get retail books provided by an MCAT prep companies such as Kaplan, Examkrackers, Princeton Review.
That's your personal preference.
Kaplan stresses the most amount of strategy to take an exam.
Princeton Review is a content-heavy course.
Examkrackers offers online and in-classroom classes but there are mixed reviews about their classrooms.
Free online resources like the Khan Academy (a few years ago, they hooked up with AAMC to run a contest and funding for people to rate MCAT prep materials for their system)
Things to consider here when choosing your resources:
Your learning style
Your discipline in studying
Your financial considerations
Understand where you are in the process and how are you going to be able to schedule all these things
Rich personally believes that everyone should be in some sort of formal course (online or classroom). If you're thinking about investing a couple hundred thousand dollars of debt to go to med school, then $2,500 to pay...