My son is signing up for football in middle school. Full pads and helmets football. His buddies are doing it, and anything that keeps him running and moving I’m all for.
Now, in order to go to practice, he had to watch a video on concussions and answer some multiple choice questions.
A halfway decent test taker could easily pass the test without ever having seen the videos.
You can feel which way they are leading you and the PANCE is no different. You might think it is, but it isn’t. They want you to get the questions right. They aren’t working against you.
There are little clues throughout the questions and all throughout the answer choices to guide you in the right direction. In the October issue of the Physician Assistant Exam Scholars Newsletter, I’m going to show you the road signs. I’m going to show you how it’s done.
Like Sherlock Holmes explaining to Dr. Watson how the killer must be a tall man with a red face and short clipped fingernails. At first Watson is flabbergasted. How could Holmes know that? Once Homes explains it though, it’s plain as day.
I’m going to show you just how to go through PANCE-type questions, so that you can wring the most out of them and get credit for every bit of knowledge stored inside that brain.
Physician Assistant Exam Scholars Newsletter
Brian Wallace
P.S. Members of PAES also receive access to every podcast episode, periodic discounts on PAER materials, and priority email responses from yours truly.