One of the most common questions I hear when advising people preparing for the USMLE is how to memorize and remember all the details required for their exam. The short answer is that if you are at the level of memorizing, you are simply not ready to take any of the Steps of the USMLE. Yes, the USMLE requires you to know essential medical knowledge. But, doing well on the exam comes from being able to apply that knowledge, not from the mastery of rote memorization.
USMLE is all about structure of pyramid to understand:
The examiners assume that you already know the required medical content. Your medical school success certifies that you have the basic knowledge already. The USMLE is not testing you on what you know, but problem-solving, whether you know what to do with what you know.
You do not get to this level of mastery required for medical practice all at once, but by increasing levels of involvement and understanding over time. These levels can be conceptualized as pyramid in which one learning task supports the next. Recognition, being familiar enough with material to know it when you see it, is the bottom level of the pyramid. Next comes Memorization, being able to call content to mind when needed. Problem-solving, the third level, is achieved when you can combine remembered content and apply it to find the best response to presented situations. At the top of the pyramid comes Innovation, being able to create a new knowledge, new understanding, and new responses.
In medical school you are tested primarily on recognition and memorization. The USMLE test you primarily on problem-solving. The amount of problem-solving required increases as you move from Step 1 to Step 3. The Clinical Case Simulations of Step 3 push problem-solving right up to the border of innovative thought.
You need to do something with the material
Outlines help
So does making diagrams
But, nothing speeds up the process like talking about the material
Interacting with peers and professors is the quickest way to boost your mastery beyond the level to recall, to being able to use the material you have learned
The bottom line is that there are a lot of good sources of study material out there, but none of it will get you where you need to be unless you use it the right way. Before you take your USMLE, you must move beyond memorization to application and problem-solving. The USMLE does not want to see what you know, but whether you can use that knowledge like a physician.
Read full article at: http://www.edupristine.com/blog/essential-guidance-usmle-exam
Related article at: USMLE Step 1 Course
No comments:
Post a Comment