BJ moves extremely fast and plugs in pearls/mnemonics that will stick with you for weeks. It was a great tool for a general second pass of the material (I recommend a first pass of FA and general overview). this is my first post since I was applying to med school, but I got pretty excited when I saw people looking at using DIT. I haven't been on SDN for a LONG time, lol. I'm the kind of person who needs the push of watching daily lectures, but is this worth the cost?Īnyone with first-hand experience or any idea beyond what I know (which is just what DIT says) is invited to offer an opinion. ![]() So money, and more importantly, good test prep technique is at stake. ![]() I don't know if I trust him.he might just read straight off of First Aid and waste my $600. I don't see how this could go wrong, but the guy who lectures kind of creeps me out. The lectures are meant to be active-learning and they use First Aid 2009 as the text book. But has anyone on here tried them out? They offer, for $600, a series of lectures spanning 15 straight days, each day being 5-6 hours of lecture. Noone at my med-school has an opinion, except for the fact that noone was impressed when they came and spoke to us. I wouldn't consider a KAPLAN course because they are too expensive and I know that company doesn't bode well with me from previous experience. ![]() I'm not confident I can get up every morning and cover all I need to by myself. I am the kind of guy who, when it comes to things like preparing for Step I, needs something structured a push, if you will. I have the essentials ready to go once finals are over on May 8th:īut there's one major detail. I am preparing for Step I, which I am scheduled to take on June 3rd, 2009. I've been busy with the notorious pre-clinical years. It's been a long, long time since my last post, haha.
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