Hi I took the UCAT exam last year, and I would say the main thing that helped me was practising Triaging so that I could get maximum marks throughout the exam. Hope this helps :)
This is specific to the abstract reasoning section but I found it super helpful to compile a document to categorise the patterns that you notice as you are doing practise questions (eg. patterns with lines, patterns with clocks, patterns with shapes etc) as they do repeat themselves. This document can then serve as a 'cheat sheet' for yourself, so you can quickly look through them if you don't feel like doing questions or the night before/the morning of your exam. I think this can also apply to the situational judgement section where a lot of the scenarios can be similar/have the same theme.
Hi I took the UCAT exam last year, and I would say the main thing that helped me was practising Triaging so that I could get maximum marks throughout the exam. Hope this helps :)
This is specific to the abstract reasoning section but I found it super helpful to compile a document to categorise the patterns that you notice as you are doing practise questions (eg. patterns with lines, patterns with clocks, patterns with shapes etc) as they do repeat themselves. This document can then serve as a 'cheat sheet' for yourself, so you can quickly look through them if you don't feel like doing questions or the night before/the morning of your exam. I think this can also apply to the situational judgement section where a lot of the scenarios can be similar/have the same theme.
https://www.scrubbed-up.com/post/ucat-exam-tips
Check out this article for some helpful tips 🤗
Thank you !!
Practice is key though- great places for questions are Medify and the UCAT Website itself.