Kaplan’s MCAT Biology Review 2024-2025 offers an expert study plan, detailed subject review, and hundreds of online and in-book practice questions—all authored by the experts behind the MCAT prep course that has helped more people get into medical school than all other major courses combined.
Prepping for the MCAT is a true challenge. Kaplan can be your partner along the way—offering guidance on where to focus your efforts and how to organize your review. This book has been updated to match the AAMC’s guidelines precisely—no more worrying about whether your MCAT review is comprehensive!
The Most Practice More than 350 questions in the book and access to even more online—more practice than any other MCAT biology book on the market. The Best Practice Comprehensive biology subject review is written by top-rated, award-winning Kaplan instructors.Full-color, 3-D illustrations, charts, graphs and diagrams help turn even the most complex science into easy-to-visualize concepts.All material is vetted by editors with advanced science degrees and by a medical doctor.Online resources, including a full-length practice test, help you practice in the same computer-based format you’ll see on Test Day. Expert Guidance High-yield badges throughout the book identify the topics most frequently tested by the AAMC.We know the The Kaplan MCAT team has spent years studying every MCAT-related document available. Kaplan’s expert psychometricians ensure our practice questions and study materials are true to the test.
Yes I'm counting these on Goodreads fuck off. I cried during the cardiovascular chapter. Our bodies are incredible... literally doing the most. Why so many hormones to memorize tho :/
This was by far my favorite of the Kaplan mcat books (though that’s a low bar). While it still very much reads like a textbook, the majority of the chapters are organized around human body systems, and the human body is very cool! The material felt much more relevant to what I’ll need to know in medical school and as a future doctor. I enjoyed the “real world” tidbits that put the concepts into context and discussed what happens when these biological systems fail.