i had a breakdown yesterday over the fact I still have 100 lectures to cover and also remember, and I haven't even started anatomy yet. is it possible to pass exams, and anyone have any tips I could utilise? - a desperate and anxious crammer
Hey there, thanks for posting a question in the Medicine forum.
The Medicine forum gets a high volume of questions being posted, and some of these are already answered by the resources and Megathreads that members of the community and volunteers have created. This is an automatic post which is designed to highlight these resources. Below is a list of threads and articles that could answer your question (you should be looking in the original post of the megathreads). If one of the below threads is a more relevant place to ask your question, please post a reply in that thread to ask your question. If your query is answered by one of the Megathreads or articles linked below, and you would like us to close this thread for you, please reply to this thread with just the words "thank you". A member of our team will then get it locked.
If your query is answered by one of the Megathreads or articles linked above, and you would like us to close this thread for you, please reply to this thread with just the words "thank you". A member of our team will then get it locked.
Yes, it's possible, but doing it by going over every lecture in depth might not be the wisest strategy at this point. Do you have access to a syllabus/past questions? That will help you identify key areas to work on.
i had a breakdown yesterday over the fact I still have 100 lectures to cover and also remember, and I haven't even started anatomy yet. is it possible to pass exams, and anyone have any tips I could utilise? - a desperate and anxious crammer
i had a breakdown yesterday over the fact I still have 100 lectures to cover and also remember, and I haven't even started anatomy yet. is it possible to pass exams, and anyone have any tips I could utilise? - a desperate and anxious crammer
Try Dr Fox Quick Draw anatomy on YouTube (there's a book too for loads more diagrams). They're quite new.