Step 2 CK ensures that due attention is devoted to principles of clinical sciences and basic patient-centered skills that provide the foundation for the safe and competent practice of medicine under supervision.
Step 2 CK is a one-day examination. It is divided into eight minute blocks and administered in one 9-hour testing session. The number of questions per block on a given examination will vary but will not exceed The total number of items on the overall examination will not exceed The examination also includes a minimum allotment of 45 minutes of break time and a minute optional tutorial. On the Homepage , use the Product Search to find your self-assessment. Click on the name of the product and select a form.
Choose your preferred pacing mode Standard or Self-paced. Click Add to Cart , and then follow the on screen prompts. Click Checkout to complete the transaction.
Click the My Exams link to access your purchased assessment. Some Self-Assessment forms will be retired at the same time new forms are released. New Versions of Forms and Retiring Forms:. Have questions about ordering the upcoming new forms? Check out the FAQs here. Daily Anki review allowed me to retain what I had already mastered. To remember what I was mastering, Alec recommended finishing my cards before leaving the hospital.
This was easier during inpatient rotations where the workload was geared towards the morning. The front-loading of work on inpatient rotations allowed me to focus my evenings on mastering new material and question interpretation. More on question interpretation later. Throughout the year, attendings and residents commented on my strong knowledge base and active learner mentality. Instead, I was recalling information I already learned. Daily Anki review helped me ace my shelf exams.
Not only could I handle random pimp questions with ease, but I also built professional confidence by recalling medical information necessary for patient care. Mastering question interpretation was the most important factor to my clerkship and Step 2 success.
To do this, my third-year focus was interpreting questions and understanding pathophysiology. To practice vignettes, there are a ton of resources for questions. Each shelf exam has specific resources better suited for it than others.
UWorld is the standard QBank. I learned to be flexible with the number of questions between UWorld and shelf-specific resources.
Rather, the quality of my interpretation took my examination skills to the next level. For example, a QBank question may describe an elderly man who suddenly stops urinating after a surgical procedure. The question is often something generic, like.
Without knowing anything about the vignette or the answer choices, I should be able to answer from only the stand-alone question. Boiling everything down to a single question gauges whether you understand the vignette and what the question is asking. I would then look at the answer choices and do a process of elimination. I also prioritized my weaker concepts by focusing my content review on questions I missed.
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