It is possible to work at it yourself, many have done well by doing just that personally i found it useful but it was a lot cheaper when I went. Idk whether I would pay for it now... might be worth one person going and everyone splitting but you got to trust that friend completely.
I've been doing practice online tests which have been really helpful, what is a course? Does someone who has done both online tests and the course have advice to give on what is better , cheaper? It sounds expensive ... and what does it offer above the online courses apart from forcing you to sit there and do it?
Hey, My dad is going away on holiday in a week for a while. So i have to book my ukcat in the next 7 days.
Firstly im aiming for 700+, How early whould I need to start revising to achive this target and to what intensity?
Also what materials should i use cause i dont have a clue were to start and skills i actually have to practice?
This Honest is right. Focus on your exams as they are much more important.
However, I studied for about an average of an hour a day for around 4 weeks prior to the test and I got 700 on the dot. Those 28 hours boosted my confidence and I feel really helped me get a good score.
This Honest is right. Focus on your exams as they are much more important.
However, I studied for about an average of an hour a day for around 4 weeks prior to the test and I got 700 on the dot. Those 40 hours boosted my confidence and I feel really helped me get a good score.
Sorry, but where di 40 hours come from? An hour a day AVERAGE for 4 weeks makes 28 hours... somehow you slipped another 12 hours in there :P
OP, google it, or search this forum. But as for my personal experience, last year I did about 2 hours revision (yes, in total... ) and got 665. Second time round, I reckon I did about 15-20 hours in total and got 752.5 average. Everyone will need and want to do different amounts of work - but bear in mind that more revision doesn't necessarily make for a better score. All you can do is prepare the style of questions, whether that takes you 3 hours or 300 is irrelevant. You can't learn to be good at the UKCAT basically, you can just get yourself quicker and more used to the questions themselves and boost your confidence.
Sorry, but where di 40 hours come from? An hour a day AVERAGE for 4 weeks makes 28 hours... somehow you slipped another 12 hours in there :P
OP, google it, or search this forum. But as for my personal experience, last year I did about 2 hours revision (yes, in total... ) and got 665. Second time round, I reckon I did about 15-20 hours in total and got 752.5 average. Everyone will need and want to do different amounts of work - but bear in mind that more revision doesn't necessarily make for a better score. All you can do is prepare the style of questions, whether that takes you 3 hours or 300 is irrelevant. You can't learn to be good at the UKCAT basically, you can just get yourself quicker and more used to the questions themselves and boost your confidence.
You are correct, not sure what kind of maths I did there! It has been amended.
And to the OP - just do as much as you feel comfortable with. Twelve is right, there is no set time you have to revise for.
I know some of you might think this a bit early, but I was wondering when everyone is thinking of doing their UKCAT? My sister told me to register now for end of August so I'd have as much time as possible to practice - when are you all going to do your ukcat do you think?
I am taking the UKCAT and BMAT this year hopefully, and Im just starting to think about it. Not sure when Im going to register for the UKCAT though, got enough on my plate at the minute tbh!
The earlier the better. Having been through the process myself trust me. The course is NOT like a revision course (where it would then be beneficial to do just before) but shows you how to answer the questions systematically, i.e. it gives you a skillset which you need to practice. Give yourself enough time to practice these techniques by booking as early as you can and don't leave your UKCAT too late. Best to know where you stand with it early so you can research which universities are best to apply to with the score you get.
could you tell me if the course was much better than just practicing from a book? kaplans a bit expensive
could you tell me if the course was much better than just practicing from a book? kaplans a bit expensive
Kaplan teaches you how to approach questions. For example with the shapes it shows you a systematic way of going through each possible pattern. For code breaking it shows you how to do the q quickly and efficiently. It stresses the importance of skipping questions especially in the maths section. Those things will increase your score only if you didn't do them before. If you think you don't need it then you possibly don't. It is steep but I recommend it because it helps the people who otherwise wouldn't do well. But if you're gifted at this sort of thing, don't do it - spend the money on something else.
I am finding it extremely hard to score well on the verbal reasoning section. I just cannot get the answers right! This is my 3rd time sitting the ukcat so there is a lot of pressure to get a sky high score, and nope, even after doing the ukcat for 3 years I still haven't grasped verbal reasoning! That section is a killer!
As others had said, there does seem to be some luck (i.e. guessing correctly or getting slightly simpler questions on the day), but this doesn't mean that generally, practice helps you get a higher score. The 600 UKCAT book was excellent (I took it everywhere and would do a couple questions on the train or so at first to ease into it) as were a lot of the free resources on TSR, which are particularly useful as you get used to entering answers online whilst doing working out on paper (which was surprisingly time consuming at first ). I think that most of the tips have been covered above so all I'll add is don't get too disheartened at how hard the questions are initially as I was completely rubbish at first, but with practise I managed to get a pretty good score. Good luck to all of you
As others had said, there does seem to be some luck (i.e. guessing correctly or getting slightly simpler questions on the day), but this doesn't mean that generally, practice helps you get a higher score. The 600 UKCAT book was excellent (I took it everywhere and would do a couple questions on the train or so at first to ease into it) as were a lot of the free resources on TSR, which are particularly useful as you get used to entering answers online whilst doing working out on paper (which was surprisingly time consuming at first ). I think that most of the tips have been covered above so all I'll add is don't get too disheartened at how hard the questions are initially as I was completely rubbish at first, but with practise I managed to get a pretty good score. Good luck to all of you
Does anyone know how you can get the Kaplan course materials without having to go on the course (I could probably afford the materials but the course is an ungodly amount of money)