Can you adapt to the wide variety of learning environments in medicine? Can you show your best abilities in the exams at the same time as learning to be a doctor? Can you balance your studies with an enjoyable social life? Can you develop your professionalism and manage your 'digital footprint'?
How to Succeed at Medical School will help you learn these vital skills, and much more.
Written by experienced medical school teachers and packed full of case studies, illustrations, quotes from other students, tip boxes, exercises, portfolios and learning techniques to help you communicate, study and revise - it’s an essential resource to help you thrive at medical school.
This thoroughly updated second edition includes new chapters on Professionalism and Teaching, and provides invaluable insight into what to expect from the start of medical school right through to the start of your medical career.
Despite the general information that might suit a student from another, there are some facts that I personally have never come a cross of or even thought about in depth ..
Such as the portfolio & reflection chapter, I really wished that I have read this before but hopefully there is still time to go back through and continue on writing a better experience.. My medical school does actually offer a portfolio program but I actually never have benefit from it ..
This is a good book to review methods of studying you have owned before medicene and how they changed to cope with this highly demanding field ..
In the name Yahuveh I want to write my opinion about this book. In my opinion the first and second chapters of the book are wonderful which forced me to say author God bless you!
Other chapters are useful too but not all subject useful for all years of medical school.
I only have one problem with this book which author wrote study only 10 hours are average study time for learning in medical school.
If I remember true according AAMS the average study time by medical student is 21 or 24 hours each week without university.
And of course with only 10 hours with optimistic, no one can study medicine.
was a great book at giving advice on what to expect at medical school and how to make the most of the work and opportunities given. It also included quotes from students at different phases of study. It was good to get a variety of options and tips for tackling medical school.
The best part of this book is that in every chapter, it reminds you each student is unique. Students should be flexible and find what works best for them not their peers. It taught me much about OSCEs because I didn’t have any ideas about it! It worths your time, I recommend it for every medical students.