![]() During the last month, I pretty much only looked at the starred ones. I starred cards that I wanted to review later. Images on the cards are all from Quizlet's built-in database. Then, he would read the flashcard (or the corresponding pages in his review book) and point out the things he missed. The boy preferred to study by naming a concept, closing his eyes, and rambling out loud for 60 seconds about everything he could remember related to that term. The cards were for broader concepts, with longer definitions that contained both key ideas and more specific terms. On Quizlet, the superior flashcard platform. These flashcards could only test your rote memorization of singular terms. To the boy, the MCAT tested your ability to comprehend some theory or central idea, find connections between different concepts, and recall related terms. Moreover, everyone's decks had 10,000+ cards, with a different card for every single term they had ever read. ![]() It seemed like everyone used Anki to study, but this kid wasn't about that spaced repetition shit. Most importantly, he searched for the fabled study guides and flashcards that these legends had created, so that he could do as minimal work as possible to get a 520+. Under the cover of night, he eagerly read (skimmed) through hundreds of pages of review books and scoured r/MCAT and SDN for sage advice from heroes and heroines that had accomplished this incredible feat before. ![]() Once upon a time, in a small village far, far away, there was a little boy who dreamed of receiving a 520+ on the MCAT.
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