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How to approch MCQs - saonew
#1
KNOW how to approach multiple choice questions and PRACTICE. Some people seem to instinctively know how to answer multiple choice questions correctly, others of us not so much. There are skills that you can learn to help you answer these kinds of test questions. Here™s how Kaplan recommends approaching vignette styled multiple choice questions:
1. assemble key clues into a mental œsnapshot of the patient.
2. understand precisely what is being asked
3. allow a few moments to think, recall, and to anticipate possible answers
4. compare the given choices to your anticipated answer
5. mark choices that match best
6. rule out choices that don™t account for all findings
7. mark the best answer
Kaplan™s experts say that people who are bad at multiple choice questions focus on the choices rather than the stems of the questions. This is a very inefficient approach and one that tends to result in more mistakes. Those who are good at multiple choice questions focus on the stems, not the choices.
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#2
Tips for the Week Before
During the last few days before the exam you should be tapering off your studying, and getting into mental and physical shape.

1. This is not the time for cramming in new material... but a time to organize and integrate what you already know. Work on making what you know more accessible.

2. Review keywords, phrases and concepts. Look over your summary notes one more time. This is the time to drill yourself on essential information. The key is to practice recall, not simply read over the material again. What you need to know is probably already in your head. Your task now is to train yourself to access it when you need it. Doing practice questions is a good way to reinforce your recall skills. Use them to clarify your understanding of key details.

3. No one can know everything that is asked on this exam. Be honest with yourself about what you do and do not know. Knowing that you do not know something gives you more of a sense of control on the exam and makes you less likely to panic when you encounter the material and/or waste time on questions you are not likely to get correct.

4. Get yourself onto the right time schedule. Wake up every day at the same time you will need to on the day of the exam. This will get your circadian rhythm coordinated with the exam schedule. Do not nap between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. Otherwise you will accustom your body to shutting down during the critical exam hours. If you get up at the right time each day, you will also find it easier to fall asleep at night. By getting into the proper sleep-wake cycle, you will find it easier to get to sleep the night of the exam as well.

5. You should be getting a sufficient amount of sleep. For most people that means at least 6 to 7 hours a night. Sleep is an essential time for your brain to consolidate what you have learned. You need sleep; it makes you a more efficient learner when you are awake.

6. Take some time each day to relax. Have a good meal. Take a walk in the fresh air. Find time for exercise. The change of pace will refresh you and the physical activity will help you relax and sleep at night.

7. If you haven't done so already, visit the Prometric Test Center where you will be taking the exam. It will be indicated on your exam entry ticket. This will ensure you know how to get there and how much time you should allow for the commute. You can see where you should park, and see what the computer set-up is like.

8. Review the tutorial at http://www.usmle.org/step1/default.htm. Become familiar with the interface, the location of key information on the screen and how to navigate between screens. If you walk into the exam familiar with the exam, you will not have to use any of your valuable break time to do this on the test day.
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#3
yes
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