

Obviously get the acer material! I also found the Organic Chemistry for Dummies book rather good for learning organic chemistry from scratch. Griffiths Review 8/10: Good overview, cheap, worth getting. Medprep Sample Papers 7/10: Fairly similar to actual GAMSAT.ĭes O'neill 9/10: Epic question bank, endless questions, several practice papers. Nothing spectacular, their collection of questions are fairly similar to the GAMSAT. Ozimed Sample Papers 7/10: Very recall based, so unlike GAMSAT in this respect, but a good starting point to check your science knowledge. I would prioritise in getting some of the past exam papers over the 'textbooks'. Don't go on the course, just get the material cheap second hand. Exam papers, very similar to the real thing. Grad Med Science books & sample exam papers 8/10: Organic chemistry is not great, physical chemistry, biology and physics good. It's marketed as the holy grail of GAMSAT, but it's way too shallow, and the stupid cat animation drove me crazy. GAMSAT Gold Standard 3/10: other than the practice paper at the end of the book, this book ****ed me off. However Khan academy and online resources are more than good enough to learn the science from, even from scratch. This is how we thought they ranked.Ĭollins Advanced Science 8/10: good for general knowledge, if you are jumping into the science at the deep end. Here is however a quick snapshot of the material that I came across with another friend who I was studying with.
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If you have specific questions about each section, or about what study materials I used, feel free to message me or post here, and I will look to get back to you as soon as possible. In addition, there are people who sell books (especially on gumtree) but the books are not what they are described to be, so I urge you to be especially diligent when buying second hand books and not end up wasting money and energy like I did. There are a lot of 'agents' posing to be users and trying to give their books a good reputation on the forums. I wasted an incredible amount of time looking for appropriate resources, and there is a huge amount of misinformation on the internet with what the appropriate resources are and hopefully I can help with regard to this and the best way to revise for the exam. At university I wrote a handful of short essays in my first year, and none since.Īs a result, I was approaching all sections of the GAMSAT at the worst possible starting point. For A levels, I hadn't done any sciences (I did Maths, Further Maths, Economics, Politics, Music & French). Previous to taking up GAMSAT, I did Economics at university and worked in Investment Banking.
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I was also able to secure four offers on my first attempt (St George's, Nottingham, Swansea and Exeter) - so I have written a section below on how to best prepare for MMI interviews. Having sat both, I wouldn't say this is true, as the September exam was in some ways a lot of harder and more data analysis driven than the March counterpart. The reason I sat the September exam was because I was told by a lot of people that the September exam is actually 'easier' and the distribution is more favourable to get higher marks. I think the S1 rise is attributable simply to more practice, S2 drop was due to not practising essays anymore (got fed up) and the S3 increase was due to practice and better understanding of Physics. A rise in both S1 and S3, and a slight drop in S2. I scored S1: 64, S2: 86 & S3: 76.įor the September exam, my total score went up to 82. After 3 months of self study - (I started preparation five months before the exam but mostly wasted time on the two months chasing down resources and figuring out what the exam was all about!).

In March, I ended up scoring 76 despite under performing in section 1 after taking painkillers for a fever and feeling very groggy during section 1. Once in March 2016 as well as September 2016. I took the GAMSAT twice and scored 76 the first time and 82 the second time.
