I was coughing so frequently at night that I essentially wasn’t sleeping at all, and chose to change my test date to give myself a few days to recover. But for the right reasons.Ībout five days before my exam, what had started out as a pesky dry cough turned into acute bronchitis. To get to this point in medical school, you’ve already come so far and had your fair share of successes: do what you can to stay true to that best version of yourself. Don’t try to dramatically change your way of life during your dedicated study period. If you’re a little bit of a workaholic and grinding through all of UWorld two times makes you truly happy, that’s OK, too. Stay attuned to when you feel overworked, and cut back accordingly it’s OK to only do 50 percent of the UWorld Qbank during your Step 2 dedicated period if you already did all the questions during third year (that’s what I did!). Take a day off from studying periodically, exercise and maybe even meditate. Yes, you have to study a lot, but not so much that you’re sleeping less than eight hours a night. Some claim the only way to ace the USMLE is to study 14 hours a day - I disagree. In addition to mastering content, test-taking technique is crucial for USMLE success, and unless you have the option of tutoring, the only way to hone these skills is through practice questions. All of the content you need to master for Step 2 CK can be found in the UWorld explanations, and OME is a great way to learn that content in a more efficient way. Another common mistake is to initially avoid question-based resources, claiming that you should “save” questions for when you’ve built a solid knowledge base through reading, yet reading alone results in much poorer information retention than doing practice questions. It’s much better to thoroughly review the most well-done and high-yield resources like UWorld and the NBMEs. A significant number of students use too many resources without reviewing any of them in sufficient depth. This doesn’t come naturally to everyone but as a USMLE tutor, I’ve found that it’s definitely teachable. In my eight years as a test-prep tutor, I’ve learned that the key to standardized tests is not only doing practice questions but also thinking like the test maker, always asking “what are they testing here?” and approaching questions from that perspective.
I find that both “tutor” mode and doing questions by subject can create bad habits, such as answering questions carelessly because you’re used to seeing the answer right away or relying too heavily on the context of a question’s subject area. For UWorld, I did blocks of random topics in the “Timed” mode as this most closely simulates test-day conditions. The only resources I used for Step 2 CK were the UWorld Qbank and Self-Assessments, the NBME Comprehensive Clinical Science Self-Assessments, and OME. If you do your best to prepare for every single shelf exam during third year, by the time you get to Step 2 CK studying, you’ll be way ahead.
I also did every exam in the NBME Clinical Mastery series before the relevant shelf, cross-referencing UWorld and OME as necessary, to fully understand each question I had gotten wrong. To do well on these exams, you need a comprehensive foundation, which in my case was built using UWorld and OnlineMedEd videos. When you get a tricky question right on a shelf exam, you often find yourself saying, “I’m lucky I saw that one time!” But you won’t excel if you leave content mastery, a key component of test prep, to luck. If you think about it, what you see and are taught on the wards is fairly random. It may seem obvious, but it’s pretty important to recognize that test-taking requires a fundamentally different skill set than actually practicing medicine. This can be challenging because what you learn on the wards may not have any relevance to how you are assessed on the shelf. Proper preparation for shelf exams during rotations is key to establish a solid foundation for Step 2 CK.