Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Spaced repetition and why itââ¬â¢s important while studying for the MCAT
Spaced repetition at its simplest is the idea that the more frequently youââ¬â¢re exposed to information, the better you remember it. Itââ¬â¢s more effective to repeat something 7 times over the course of one week than over the course of a single day. Your brain needs time to process the information youââ¬â¢ve learned and make connections with other stuff you know before it can file it away in to your long-term memory. If you donââ¬â¢t give it time, youââ¬â¢re more prone to forget it, which is why itââ¬â¢s extremely common for people to remember next to nothing after cramming all night for an exam the next day. So, we all know that the MCAT is not an exam you cram for, and rationally we may know that we should all be implementing spaced repetition in our day to day studying. But what does spaced repetition look like, practically speaking, while preparing for such a behemoth of a test? Step 1. Review new information twice in one day Within a day of initially learning the information (this could be going to lecture, or teaching yourself a chapter in an MCAT review book), you should review the information again. Try not to rely on notes or the textbook and see how much key information you can recall. Donââ¬â¢t worry if you need to reference your notes, though you shouldnââ¬â¢t just skim or reread the material again. With the sheer amount of material on the MCAT, itââ¬â¢s easy to fall into the trap of rereading a passage and lulling yourself into a false confidence just to check the topic of your list. Unfortunately, you canââ¬â¢t rely on your brain to access that information on test day if you stop there. Step 2. Return to the information the subsequent day The next day, try to recall the information again. This could mean flashcards, hands free while walking to class, sitting on the train during a commute, or even in your bedroom while you pretend to ââ¬Å"teachâ⬠an imaginary student. Step 3. Test yourself daily with limited access to notes Try to recall the information again for the next few days until you feel comfortable and donââ¬â¢t need to reference any outside material anymore. This is where practice questions become very helpful, but you could also create your own questions to test yourself. If you are a visual or tactile learner you can also draw diagrams on scrap pieces of paper or rewrite tricky concepts in your notebook. Step 4. Move onto to other topics Thereââ¬â¢s a lot of material to cover, so after youââ¬â¢re comfortable with one topic, you should move on to the next. However, itââ¬â¢s not a bad idea to schedule ââ¬Å"reviewâ⬠days for yourself where you pull out all the topics youââ¬â¢ve already covered and see how much you can still recall. If you find yourself blanking on something particular, donââ¬â¢t be discouraged by repeating steps 1-3 again. Better now than test day. The MCAT can be incredibly daunting, but the months leading up to your exam can be a period of incredible growth as a learner, even if you were a late-night crammer leading up to this point. I know I personally spent a lot of my undergraduate years frantically trying to memorize as much as I could, ââ¬Å"brain dumpingâ⬠during the test, and forgetting almost everything by the next weekend, just to repeat it again the next month. However, once I genuinely reevaluated my study habits, I could learn and retain more, and it ended up saving me time in the long run. If you give spaced repetition a fair shot, you will be amazed at how much youââ¬â¢re able to fit in your long-term memory. The road to medical school is long, and the MCAT is one of its most formidable challenges. You will be relieved to know that what you learned in your premedical courses is actually on the test. But studying for the MCAT is more about taking that knowledge stored way back there in the nooks and crannies of your mind, bringing it to the fore, and then learning to twist and stretch it in the ways the MCAT tests. In reality, studying for the MCAT is no more (or less) difficult than spending late hours on a physics problem set or an entire weekend on an organic chemistry lab report. Just like these other tasks, the MCAT requires endurance and follow-through, but it becomes significantly more manageable when you work with a Cambridge Coaching MCAT tutor to apply a structured, systematic, and strategic approach to your studying. Anyone can study hard - but the real key to MCAT success is learning to study smart. So, while all forms of MCAT preparation require you to crunch a lot of material, we focus on helping you to make strategic choices about your areas of focus at every step of the game. Each Cambridge Coaching tutor is a highly-skilled manager of your personal study process. He or she will do more than just target your weaknesses - your tutorââ¬â¢s goal is to identify the sections where you have the greatest potential for improvement, and teach you to wring every last point from them by creating the roadmap for your studying, and helping you stick to it. Right from the start, your tutor will create a customized syllabus for you, and will then modify that syllabus as needed. ; Taking the MCAT in 2020? Check out some other helpful blog posts below! CARS: Dos and Donââ¬â¢ts for Studying Success 3 essential tips for the MCAT Psychology/Sociology section MCAT score plateaus: why they happen, and what to do about them
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