Saturday, July 31, 2010
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Topics: 11
Posts: 257
05/28/10 - 03:35 AM #5
Well, I'm about to start my residency in Emergency Medicine, so I'm an incoming intern.
I studied on and off for two months, while I was very busy and looking for an apartment and a car.
I used USMLEWorld Qbank, USMLEWorld CCS (cases are very similar to the real exam, but you have no feedback at all), Dr. Red preparation (useful to get familiar with the test environment and to learn some time-saving tips and tricks) and USMLEConsult Step 3 CCS course.
The two most useful resources are: USMLEWorld Qbank (nice and tough questions as usual, these guys are the very best in simulating the real exam experience) and USMLEConsult Step 3 CCS (the very best simulation of CCS because it gives you a constant feedback, plus you've got hundreds of cases to practice: I got only one asterisk in CCS performance, which is an out-of-scale higher performance thanks to this program).
I hope this can help you.
Posts: 257
05/28/10 - 03:35 AM #5
Well, I'm about to start my residency in Emergency Medicine, so I'm an incoming intern.
I studied on and off for two months, while I was very busy and looking for an apartment and a car.
I used USMLEWorld Qbank, USMLEWorld CCS (cases are very similar to the real exam, but you have no feedback at all), Dr. Red preparation (useful to get familiar with the test environment and to learn some time-saving tips and tricks) and USMLEConsult Step 3 CCS course.
The two most useful resources are: USMLEWorld Qbank (nice and tough questions as usual, these guys are the very best in simulating the real exam experience) and USMLEConsult Step 3 CCS (the very best simulation of CCS because it gives you a constant feedback, plus you've got hundreds of cases to practice: I got only one asterisk in CCS performance, which is an out-of-scale higher performance thanks to this program).
I hope this can help you.
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