The University Clinical Aptitude Test, or UCAT is a two hour online exam which acts as an entrance exam for many UK medical schools. Depending on which universities you hope to go to, achieving a high centile score can be the difference between being offered a place and not.
Preparing for the UCAT can take many hours and unfortunately revising is only half the battle, you still have to go out and sit the exam. Many students put hours and hours of work into past questions without giving any thought to the exam itself so here are five top tips in how to perfect your UCAT exam technique.
The time allowance for each UCAT question is incredibly small. It is of the main reasons the UCAT is such a challenging exam. Given five minutes, most of us would be able identify the pattern and difference between two groups of shapes but doing in in under 15 seconds is a different matter. The timing per questions varies hugely between sections and it is critically important to know how much time you have per question in the real thing. The rough time per question in each section is as follows:
The quantitative reasoning section of the UCAT relies on being able to do quick sums in your head. The more mental maths you can do, the less you’ll need the calculator and the more time you will have for the harder questions. Unfortunately, there will always be calculations you need to check or that you cannot do in your head. For these, the UCAT exam has a built in calculator much like the one on your computer. However, using this calculator is very different to using a hand held calculator or phone and is more time consuming. When you are practicing your quantitative reasoning questions, try using your computer’s calculator so that you can get comfortable using it quickly.
The people that score the highest in the UCAT are not necessarily those that have worked the hardest, it’s those that have worked the smartest. The top decile students know what to expect on day of the exam and are not caught by surprise. The reason the there are no surprises for these students is that they have done their practice questions under exam technique. This means restricting yourself to the exact amount of time per question that you will have in the real exam.
Some sections of the exam will be harder than others and you will never be equally strong at all sections. Remember, you final score is an average of all four sections. Try not to let one bad section throw you off your game. If you find that one section did not go as smoothly as you hoped, take a 10 second breather and reset, leave that section behind and focus on what’s ahead.
Many exam centres in the UK will offer ear plugs to use when you take your exam. I would strongly recommend using these if you are offered. With the earplugs you can block out all the distracting noise to leave your brain 100% focused on each question. Like with every bit of UCAT preparation, don’t leave it to the day of the exam to try them out. Get some at home and try some practice questions with them in.
If you would like to learn more about how a private tutor can help you with your UCAT exam or medical school application, please do get in touch. We also offer tuition and expert advice on every major entrance exam, from Cambridge Law Test to the LNAT, MAT, STEP, BMAT, GAMSAT, UCAT, CAT, ELAT, GAA, HAT, PAT, MLAT, MML, OLAT, TSA and the Oxford Philosophy Test.
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info@thinktutors.com
+44 (0) 207 117 2835
Berkeley Square House,
35 Berkeley Square Mayfair,
London, W1J 5BF