Saturday, April 7, 2012

How I destroyed the MCAT with minimal study time: a ragecomic post


After all the useful posts about "How to Destroy the MCAT with Minimal Studying", I decided to write about how I actually got through with minimal studying. In 2010, I decided to take the MCAT in May, giving myself exactly 18 days to study for the MCAT. In hindsight, it was stupid and insane- I originally planned on studying during the school year, but second year was too much so that all went to hell... but thankfully, things worked out better than I expected.

Here is a graphical + text representation of how the studying went down:


Figure 1. Started studying for the MCAT

Figure 2. Days 1-10- Reviewing general chemistry, physics, biology section, and solving problems for each section.

Figure 3. Day 11- First practice MCAT (Kaplan)- PS 7 BS 10 VR 7. Printed out dozens of practice exams for PS, and went through those for the rest of the day.

Figure 4. Day 12- Second practice MCAT (Kaplan)- PS 13 BS 9 VR 10. For the rest of the day, solved PS problems, started on VR and BS as well.

Figure 5. Day 13- Third practice MCAT (Kaplan)- epic fail, PS 8 BS 6 VR 9. For the rest of the day, solve BS problems until some sort of hemorrhage.

...and the rest:

Day 14- Practice MCAT- PS 9 BS 7 VR 9. Continue practicing BS, PS.
***Massive panic- realized I've barely practised for verbal reasoning. 
Day 15- Practice MCAT+ rest doing VR practice.
Day 16- D-4. AAMC MCAT #10, started mental prep for the actual thing.
Day 17- D-3. AAMC MCAT #8. Verbal reasoning still not good.
Day 18- D-2. Still in panic for verbal reasoning, resulting in 4 EK VR exams in a day. NOT a good idea (Refer to Part 2 of MCAT series). End of studying.

Figure 6. D-1- Dead for the entire day.

D-Day- The MCAT was a traumatic experience and my memories of it started to come back weeks later.

Figure 7. Self-portrait after writing the MCAT.
As you can see, it was a mad, frantic rush of desperation and frequent bouts of hopelessness and depression.

But by the end...
Figure 8. After receiving test scores three weeks later.
Thanks to all my previous research and the resources I got from that research, I somehow pulled it off... but this approach is too risky, and I think (and I should have as well) anyone should put aside at least 1.5 months to prepare (up to 4 depending on your major). In the end, I ended up studying ~8 hours per day, totalling ~1800 pages of work while completely fried by the end of the day, every day.

Thanks for reading, good luck!

Matt

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

matt....you are amazing.


btw, I was so surprised to see so many Korean names in UT med facebook group...did you notice that as well?

Matt said...

Thanks :)
I guess the group has both 1T6s as well as 1T5s, but nevertheless it's good for the Koreans!

Anonymous said...

Hey Matt, I have exactly 1.5 months to prepare for my MCAT. Thankyou so much for all your posts.
-MK

Matt said...

MK- that's perfect. Go destroy it. Good luck!

Dal said...

Hey Matt

I just finished reading your blog, very nice work.
You mentioned the importance of doing passages on PS and BS and that you 'downloaded' some.
Can you point me to the right direction to download them as well?

Matt said...

Hi Dal,

Actually, I don't think I ever mentioned that I downloaded anything... but I assume people can get those through torrents. Keep in mind those things are usually in bad quality and you would be better off just buying some.

Sun Young Sung said...

Make me have HOPE, Matt. Gracias!

Unknown said...

where did you download all the practice tests

Anonymous said...

How did you download the practice tests and print them? I have an online subscription to Kaplan, but there is no option to print practice tests. It would be much more feasible for me to run through problems if i had them on paper and not have to use my computer the entire time.