When I graduated and started studying for my PANCE I did two things:
#1 I went to the Live Rutgers Review course and was bombarded with a year’s worth of medicine in five days. During those lectures, they hit every single detail that might be on the blueprint. I’m telling you, I couldn’t have felt more confident after walking out of those doors. After being blasted with data, I knew I couldn’t fail.
#2 I rested my neurons. I gave my brain a week off. Literally, one full week. Shocking, right? No studying, no reading, just sleeping and eating. That was about it. I knew that I needed every bit of my brain to pass the PANCE. I figured at that point, the biggest shift in my score would come from my test-taking skills ON THE DAY of the PANCE. An exhausted brain could give up 50-100 points. I needed a rested brain. So that’s what I did.
And I killed it. I got a passing score and a beautiful “C” after my name.
When people ask me what they should do before their PANCE, I tell them my story and point them to the online Rutgers course.
Knowing that you covered EVERYTHING brings on a certain swagger when you walk into the testing center.
This weekend, you can get the Rutgers online PANCE review for 15% off using the code PAER15 at checkout.
Even better, send me your receipt and I’ll send you two powerful bonuses that help you get your beautiful C too:
Bonus #1 – Secrets of the Test
This is it. Everything you wished you knew about the exam. No, this isn’t the stuff you can find on the website. This is the real deal.
I took my PANRE on a Friday morning. The kids were at school, and my wife and I were planning on going out to a really nice lunch to celebrate. I got back home at 11:45 AM and instead of heading out directly to lunch, I asked my wife to give me 15 minutes. I ran down to my office, switched on the camera, and spilled my guts.
In this video, I tell you everything I can about the exam. Places I could take an advantage. Things I did that saved time. The things that really ticked me off about the computer and how I finally fixed it in the second section. The way I handled the clock to maximize my speed. How the questions were laid out. Two tricks I use with the little dry erase board that made a HUGE difference during the exam. It’s all in there.
If you’re going to be taking the PANCE or the PANRE, then you must get Secrets of the Test.
Bonus #2 – Issue No 17 of the Physician Assistant Exam Scholars Newsletter
As you are probably already aware, I rarely make back-issues of the PAES Newsletter available, but this issue fit in so darn perfectly with the Rutgers Online PANCE review course that I couldn’t resist. Issue No 17 – Putting the Squeeze on the Hardest Topics in Cardiology has the tantalizing subtitle of “How to Learn Anything and Remember it Forever.” Read this issue and you won’t EVER miss another question on heart murmurs.
Here’s what else you’ll get when you read Issue No 17:
* A way to dissect incredibly difficult information and make it as simple as falling off a log
* The blueprint for how I’ve had fantastic success studying and taking exams with minimal effort, so that you can do the same (it isn’t that hard)
* An absolute LOVE for cardiology questions. You’ll be hoping and praying to see them on your exam. The good news is that cardiology questions make up the majority of the test, and you’re going to ace those.
* The real reason everyone makes the work so challenging to teach and learn, and how you can make it easy. But you have to be willing to set your ego aside.
* The problem with every hitting, pitching and golf coach I’ve ever met (except one), and why their methods will ruin you.
* The two things you need to know to diagnose a murmur on an exam. Yes, it’s that simple. For the life of me, I don’t understand why they don’t tell you.
* A trick that test writers use to fool you on cardiology questions.
* The exact system I use to answer exam questions.
But you’ve got to email me the receipt by Sunday night at midnight to get the bonuses. Don’t forget that step.
Here’s the link to check out the program:
https://www.mycme.com/pages/rutgers-pilot-panre-or…
Good luck,
Brian Wallace