With the obvious caveat that people learn and study differently, I offer the following general suggestions with respect to preparation for the USMLE Step I:
To elaborate:
I decided to study for about 10 hours a day for a little over a month. This may not sound like a lot when you listen to the crazies who started studying in December. So, it’s doubly important to make sure you plan out what you’re going to cover each day. Spend the majority of your time on pathology, physiology, and their bastard stepchild pathophysiology. That’ll be about 70% of the exam. This is not to say it is safe to ignore the rest, but if need be you have a better chance of guessing on the brain-and-behavior questions (and you WILL get about one ethics/professionalism question per block) than you will on actual questions about basic sciences. Pharm and micro would be next on my list.
I think I spent four days on path, four days on physio, three days on pathophys, three days on pharm, three on micro. Two days on biochem. Then a total of one day each for molecular med, brain and behavior/development, embryology, neuroanatomy, anatomy. That’s 24 days, more or less; I’ve probably forgotten a subject or two. Sounds like it’s crazy, but you’ll see once you start that it’s not. When you put in time for questions, a few days off, you spread it out to a month or even five weeks.
Oh. And sleep is nice.
Getting on a schedule that would get you up at like 8, because that’s when the test starts, is a nice idea. It didn’t work at all for me; I seem to concentrate better at night. And I couldn’t sleep before the test anyway. So I wouldn’t sweat it.
Read more USMLE tips.
Alpha Omega Alpha
http://www2.uic.edu/stud_orgs/hon/aoa/