You're welcome! Not at the moment, but long term prep would make a great future topic! The concept is similar, start with your weak subjects and end with your strongest. You will likely have time to review topics more than once. If you are still in class during long term prep you can supplement your studies with First Aid and/or whatever resources you will be using for dedicated. That way it will become review when you go through it again during dedicated. Repetition helps! You can also start completing practice questions from your question bank several months out, but don't feel obligated to do the same quantity you will during dedicated. Hope that helps!
The number varies as everyone studies differently and will also depend on how long your dedicated study period is. If you are trying to complete the entire question bank, one strategy is to divide the total questions in your bank by the number of study days. This will give you the daily average required to complete the bank. Many students try to complete 80-100% of their bank, and some also allocate time to do a second pass of the flagged/wrong ones. These are just suggestions and not requirements. Good luck to you!
Thank you for the comment! The example schedule uses a system-based approach which is a common way to organize the material and will cover most disciplines as you go through each system (anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, etc.) Many will include micro in with the immune system, but feel free to dedicate study days solely to micro if that is easier. You can also dedicate study days for general principles to include those miscellaneous topics of biochem, micro, histology, pharmacokinetics, etc. Hope that helps and good luck!
my study schedule is actually not to study at all :) i am so intelligent that no one can actually turn me down :) i do not need to pray too :) what i do is to go abroad , like when i intended to study at oxford , i have to go of course at united kingdom but sad , or unfortunately , i do not like europe that much :( so i took usmle and pass of course, but again unfortunately, i do not like to go to us where crime rates are so increasing .
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thank you.. was bit confused on how to plan a schedule...
This was a huge help, thank you
You're welcome! 👍
Literally so useful thank you
Awesome! 👏 Glad you liked it!
This video was very helpful. Thankyou so much!
No problem!
What is syllabus/ outline for USMLE
Thanks for guidelines
Happy to help! 👍
hello sir can you tell me the high yeilds topics subject wise that would be great
Thanks it's helpful
Thank you so much , do you have any plans for long term prep like 6 months
You're welcome! Not at the moment, but long term prep would make a great future topic! The concept is similar, start with your weak subjects and end with your strongest. You will likely have time to review topics more than once. If you are still in class during long term prep you can supplement your studies with First Aid and/or whatever resources you will be using for dedicated. That way it will become review when you go through it again during dedicated. Repetition helps! You can also start completing practice questions from your question bank several months out, but don't feel obligated to do the same quantity you will during dedicated. Hope that helps!
Can one be working and preparing for the exam as well?
Is there any chace to join as a doctor in usa after completing pg course in india without writing usmle
No
🤡🤡
How many questions per day?
The number varies as everyone studies differently and will also depend on how long your dedicated study period is. If you are trying to complete the entire question bank, one strategy is to divide the total questions in your bank by the number of study days. This will give you the daily average required to complete the bank. Many students try to complete 80-100% of their bank, and some also allocate time to do a second pass of the flagged/wrong ones. These are just suggestions and not requirements. Good luck to you!
Hey! I noticed Micro wasn’t included on the schedule, was wondering why that is
Thank you for the comment! The example schedule uses a system-based approach which is a common way to organize the material and will cover most disciplines as you go through each system (anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, etc.) Many will include micro in with the immune system, but feel free to dedicate study days solely to micro if that is easier. You can also dedicate study days for general principles to include those miscellaneous topics of biochem, micro, histology, pharmacokinetics, etc. Hope that helps and good luck!
my study schedule is actually not to study at all :) i am so intelligent that no one can actually turn me down :) i do not need to pray too :) what i do is to go abroad , like when i intended to study at oxford , i have to go of course at united kingdom but sad , or unfortunately , i do not like europe that much :( so i took usmle and pass of course, but again unfortunately, i do not like to go to us where crime rates are so increasing .
😊❤
What's age limit?