How do you walk in the room on test day? Do you have the confidence of a battle tested knight or are you a scared timid worm?
What’s the real difference between these two?
Training and experience. I’d venture that’s the only thing needed to transform a worm into a shining knight.
You have the experience. You’ve taken hundreds of exams, but what you’ve never been given is training. Training on how to do battle. Training on how to hold your sword. Training on good footwork.
Well, we are going to remedy that situation today. Early tomorrow the March issue of the Physician Assistant Exam Scholars newsletter will be sent to the printer and the audio version will be made available (for the first time ever, and only as long as you continue your membership).
You’ll be able to get to training as early as tomorrow (baring any snafus on my end. It’s the first time I’m delivering the audio). When you get it, here’s a few things you’ll learn:
=> The One Thing you can learn that will make everything else easier or unnecessary. I’m not kidding. I’m going to show you how to make all of PA school easier in this one. You might want to see it for yourself.
=> A short set of tricks that test writers use to take you off the sent. Like the air you breathe. You never see it, but once you know it’s there it’s so obvious.
=> The anatomy of a test question and why it matters to your adrenal glands
=> The parts of the test to enjoy, yes that’s right, enjoy. These spots can be like someone who sees a rose and doesn’t pause to appreciate it. The rose might as well not have been there. It could have provided a refreshing reprieve from the world, but you didn’t bother to take advantage. I’ll show you where to stop and smell the roses and maybe even break for a Snoopy Dance. A few seconds you can take that can tip the odds of passing well into your favor during the exam.
=> How to handle a question that bamboozled my 3rd grader (your professors use the same tricks his teacher did)
=> The single biggest test taking problem and how to fix it just a few seconds
=> There very first thing to do when you read a question (this will make the answers much easier to find in that brain of yours)
=> How to interpret what the test writers are saying in the stem to give you a clear picture of what the question is asking and what the setup is. It’s hard to show what you know when the clues they’re feeding you fly right by without you noticing them.
=> How to decide what to work on and what’s most important.
I can’t click the button for you.
Physician Assistant Exam Scholars
Brian Wallace