How to Prepare for the USMLE: Which QBank is the Best?

I’m just going to assume that I feel the way most people do about the unknown: I don’t like it. Even though I’ve known about this for two years, it still feels like it’s springing up on me and I’m frantically trying to prepare.

What’s on it? Where there a lot of Biochem or was Neuro more stressed? Were the Path hard? And on, and on.

For most of us, it’s also the first we’ve ever taken a like this on a computer. Like most, I have my habits of underlining key words in a stem, putting *’s by things that I have to skip now but may get later, putting an “X” next to a that I could never answer correctly, etc. That I’ll be staring at a mouse, keyboard and glowing screen on day is an unnerving thought.

To get over all of this, we look for . The news is that there are thousands of on Al Gore’s internet and the companies worth their salt have some great supporting software. There are free and expensive and you get what you pay for. Let’s look at some free/semi-free sources first.

Free/Semi-free sites

  • Official USMLE tutorial and (2007)
  • Tulane’s Medical Pharmacology Exams
    • I wish I had known about this site when I took Pharmacology. The are broken down by subject with explanations of all answer choices. Straightforward multiple choice and great for review.
  • Web Path
    • I used this site religiously when I took Path and it was an enourmous help. I recommend it to anyone and everyone. Great , great pictures, great .
  • Anatomy at University of Michigan
    • I used this site throughout anatomy and I still thanks to this site, I understood enough to really enjoy the subject. Surface anatomy, gross anatomy, radiology, and Anatomy Jeopardy. After the Boards, I owe these guys a bottle of wine and a nice card.
  • Lipincott Williams and Wilkins
    • 350- comprehensive USMLE , available to anyone that has registered with the site. If you have bought one of their (Physio BRS), there is an access code in the jacket.
  • Student Consult
    • I have access to this because of the two Rapid that I bought (Gross and Developmental Anatomy, Microbiology and Immunology). This site also has 350- tests for you to use (with the scratch-off code, of course).
  • Facts in a Flash
    • Not USMLE , but if you like working on flashcard without the rubberbands and mess, this might be for you.

So after looking at those sites you decide that, while very for your normal review, you need some professional help for the Boards. You need this enough that you’ll part with some loan money. Whichever company you choose, you should look for the following:

  1. Their bank (QBank) should have enough for you to give yourself a fair evaluation, there should not be so many that you could not comfortably do them all, and the quality of the should be more important than the quantity.
  2. The are given in the FRED computer that you are going to see on the USMLE, complete with marking, annotation, highlighting and strikethrough.
  3. Detailed explanations for right and wrong responses.
  4. Questions broken down by both subject and system, i.e. Cardiovascular Pharmacology.
  5. The software shows your strengths, weaknesses, progress, and performance against all other students using the same .
  6. THE HOLY GRAIL: The are of equal or greater difficulty compared to those on the USMLE.

Question Bank Subscriptions

  • KAPLAN ($279, 3 months, 2100 Qs, FRED)
    • This was likely the first company that sprang to mind. Kaplan runs review courses where you live in a hotel for 6 weeks cramming, they have online course content, video lectures, on and on. This company has worked the USMLE inside and out, and it seems a right of passage that students slog through the 2100+ before sitting for the . I was a little wary of this company, though, as people told me that by the end of the course, they were scoring in the 90s on each block and that the actual USMLE was much harder.
  • USMLE WORLD ($110, 3 months, 1730 Qs, FRED)
    • I had never heard of this , but three people that I consider intelligent (each scored 95+) told me that UW’s were more difficult than the actual USMLE. Each of them also subscribed to Kaplan, used its , and found the programs to offer the same features. After hearing this, visiting their site, and considering the prices, I had to take them seriously. It seemed like a great deal (less than half of Kaplan with a higher rating). The reviews at Prep4Usmle were positive as well. I also like that UW let’s you try their product for a month and if you like it, you can buy more months at a discount. My review of UW Qbank.
  • USMLE Rx ($199, 3 months, 2000 Qs, FRED)
    • Written by the same authors of the First Aid for the USMLE. On glance, they seem to be doing everything correctly. They let you their product and they offer integration between their online product and the First Aid . The reviews that I have found put it on par with Kaplan. I’m intrigued.
  • SCORE 95 ($99, 3 months, 4300 Qs, FRED?)
    • That this site is slick and has a string of testimonials (which read like a third grader’s homework assignment) is not impressing me. I am also having a lot of trouble actually learning about their (does it run off your computer, what features does it have, etc.). What I am impressed with is their accompanying note set, that they show you the breakdown of their , and that they offer a daily podcast to anyone that wants to listen to a new subject each day. The reviews I was able to find online say that the is poor and the are disappointing. Quantity > Quality. In fact, the number of scared me off well before my research. 4,300 comes to 360 a week for 12 weeks. I currently average 150, and that pace is keeping me busy. I cannot fathom the amount of work it would take to complete these , so why have them?
  • EXAM MASTER ($179, CD, 8,700 Qs)
    • Absolutely not. On first glance: no. After reading reviews: no. If this helps your , it’s probably a placebo effect.

So where does that leave us? If you’re going to start doing 3 months before the , anything more than 2500 isn’t practical. You have to realize that you’ll be spending all day learning the material, and that it might take 3 days to cover a topic. At a reasonable pace, you can expect to do 150-200 a week (which will take you 3 hours and 15 minutes, remember). Anything more than this might burn you. So let’s just throw Exam Master and Score95 right out.

If you believe the worst reviews of the anonymous, Kaplan, UW and Usmle Rx are the same difficulty. If that’s true, then you should go with the cheapest : UW. If you believe the best of the reviews, UW is harder than Kaplan and Rx, and you should go with UW. Though it has fewer , I got the strong feeling that the Quality >>> Quantity, and since I only have so much to devote to , I want them to challenege me and teach me something new. I dropped the $110 and am incredibly happy with it. The are stout, and with all my over-preparing for each section, I have yet to crack an 85% in any discipline. This was a choice for me.

However, if you don’t have much , are planning on putting all your eggs in the First Aid basket, and would benefit more from reasonably challenging (whereas harder Qs might hurt your confidence more than help your ), then I can see a strong for buying the Rx. It’s twice as expensive as UW, but the formats are indistinguishable and the integration with the First Aid is appealing. If this wasn’t priced at $199, I might have bought this after finishing UW.

I’m sorry to beat up on Kaplan here, but after going through their QBook and the in their Lecture Notes, I’m just not impressed. I have consistently felt that the were either written to make me feel about owning the notes, or that the notes were written to prepare me for those exact . Either way, I never had the feeling that Kaplan’s were independently difficult (if that makes sense) and from what I’ve read and heard from others, my concerns have merit. And for $279! Get over yourself, Kaplan.

So those are my thoughts on picking a QBank. I assure you that all the research was anecdotal and supplemented with gossip. I suggest heading over to the forums at prep4usmle to read for yourself, and if you have any comments on these products, I’d love to hear them.


Related Tags : prepare, qbank


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