Sunday 14 March 2010

MRCS approaches

The spectre of MRCS looms ever closer and we will be blogging regular posts to help with preparation. Ideally, you should have started thinking about revisng for Part A by now as the exam's in April. Revision tips and advice will be published by Mr T very soon. From experience, I found that there are a few things that were vital in my passing the exam:

1) Anatomy revision: REVISE REVISE REVISE anatomy as the first paper has anatomy & Physiology only. I really liked "Instant Anatomy" (little orange book) as it was concise, split into logical chapters and had diagrams that were easy to memorise.

2) "Basic Sciences for the MRCS" by Rafftery is invaluable for learning physiology and if you want to brush on some pathology. The anatomy section is a little weak (as I unwittingly told the author whilst I was awaiting to sit the second paper and really didn't stop to think why someone who looked quite senior would ask what I thought of the book!!!) but you can't have everything. If you're good at learning anatomy from text rather than need viusal aids (as I do) then the anatomy sections will do very nicely for you. One thing to make note of is that although dry, make note of the little details like paths of major nerves and embryonic development as they do come up in the exam.

3) PASTEST question bank all the way! Honestly, I'm not being paid/sponsored by them before the accusations start flying but those questions were life savers. I did not revise any pathology as that was my strong point and I wanted to focus on anatomy and physiology which I was dire in. I did every single question on the database and the pathology was spot on! Its the exact same level and many of the exam questions were very similar.  Also make sure you dont just do EMQ/SBAs as although the exam is in that format, T/F questions will test your knowledge to a higher detail and all practise is useful to building knowledge. The anatomy and physiology questons were also very useful but you definitely need to revise these to a bit more detail for the exam.

4) Try to get a few days off as zeros/annual leave around the exam if at all possible so that you can touch up on areas of weakness.

Anyway, that's it for now. Watch this space for more MRCS Part A and B information from all of us.

Amel

1 comment:

david mansi said...

Please see www.passthemrcs.co.uk for help with Part B of the Intercollegiate MRCS exam. This unique online resource provides users with access to 2000 relevant Q&As split over 120 stations to help you pass first time. We wish you the best of luck for your exams and please share the site/facebook page with people you think would benefit from it.



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