| ABIM Medicine Boards Strategies |
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| Written by Ram | |
| Thursday, 27 October 2005 | |
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Strategies for answering USMLE and other medical board exams.
ü The correct answer is much longer than the other choices given.
ü Grammatical mistakes…if the last word of the lead line of the question is “an”, you would infer the first letter of the correct choice would be an vowel (a, e, i, o, u)
ü Two of the choices basically say the same thing: Then both may be false choices (both cannot be the correct answer).
ü Two choices say the opposite thing: Then one of them may be the correct answer.
· Guessing: if you have no idea what the answer is, pick one answer (guess) and move on. There is no point wasting too much time on one particular question. This is especially true when answering medical statistics questions.
· Time management: Most USMLE exam takers have a problem with finishing the test in time. It is important to realize that you cannot get all the questions correct. Besides, you don’t have to get all questions correct to get a good score. So plan your exam strategy wisely and try to finish in time.
· Think backwards: If you have no clue what the correct answer is, try to think backwards. Read the lead line and stem of the question once more and try to guess what the testing objective of the question is. Then pick the choice that corresponds to this testing objective.
· Avoid choosing answers with absolute words like “always, never”, etc.
· If “all of the above” is one of the options, and you are trying to guess, pick it. |
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