Hey @TheFutureDoctorJournal, A little feedback here. I watched your video about 3 months ago and tried out the techniques that you laid out. I have to say that I am very pleased with the results. I've gone from 33rd percentile, currently closing in around the 70th percentile range. You saved me a lot of grief.
Great tip, can't wait to utilize this!
I love you man. Needed this
Thanks for your strategies!! Awesome channel
The "not looking at the time" strat really worked well for me thank you! could you please make a video on the structure you use to dissect the Biol/biochem section?
Good stuff mate. Thank you for posting!
will try this. did you like try all diff types of strategies and found out which worked for you?
Thanks, this works!
What did u get on MCAT?
When you say that you should read the passage questions first, do you specifically mean the question statement or the answer choices as well? Also how do you tackle the passages focusing on philosophy or humanities ? Thanks and keep posting more informational videos. I will definitely implement the strategies during my practice
Thanks so much for posting this video - very helpful! I have a question about using scrap paper on CARS - did you find yourself outlining the passage or writing the main ideas down? Also would it be helpful to use the scrap paper to write down bits of the question stem? Looking forward to your other videos.
Hey man. I implemented this technique in some mock tests I made with the qpacks to match the new test length and I’m happy to say my score jumped to 127-128 range, even really well with khan and some uworld. But when I tried it on FL 2 and 3, which I have done and reviewed before, I ended up scoring low again. Do you feel it could be a conflict in logic since I’ve done the tests before?
What about the questions that have short question stems but long answer choices? For instance, "Implicit to the passage, it can be inferred that." Do you recommend reading through the answer choices too?
How long did you devote to studying content? How long did you prepare/study for the mcat?
Do the review books still help if I did bad in my undergrad classes and didn't learn the concepts well the first time? What would U reccomend I do in this situation?
If you only read the question stems, my question is how did you approach the questions like, "The author believes all of the following EXCEPT" or "If true, which statement below would strengthen the author's argument"? I can see how this approach would be beneficial to man idea questions, function questions, or small detail questions, but then what do you do for the questions that require more critical thinking and inference? I look forward to hearing from you.
I'm sorry but it didn't help me AT ALL. For me it works better to read the passage completely. Obviously, making sure to focus on the author's opinion and then answer the questions without looking back to the passage unless the question asks for the meaning of a specific word or phrase.
What if you forget the questions lol?
Should I use this strategy for the science sections?
@nicothemedstudent1082