MCAT 2015 Basics
CHAPTER 1: MCAT 2015 BASICS
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
The MCAT is not a content-memorization test but rather an assessment of your ability to apply basic science knowledge to new situations and reason under pressure, requiring strategic preparation that differs fundamentally from typical college exam studying.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What the MCAT really tests: ability to apply knowledge to new situations and reason logically under timed pressure, not just content recall.
- Test structure: 7.5-hour computer-based exam with four sections (Chem/Phys, CARS, Bio/Biochem, Psych/Soc), mostly passage-based questions.
- Scoring approach: scaled exam with no guessing penalty; you can void scores within 5 minutes after completing the test.
- Common confusion: treating the MCAT like a college science test that rewards memorization—medical schools already see your transcripts; they want to know how you think.
- Strategic preparation: review basics, then practice applying them to MCAT-style questions; use process of elimination and pacing strategies.
🎯 What the MCAT actually measures
🧪 Not a typical college science test
The MCAT is really a test of your ability to apply basic knowledge to different, possibly new, situations, and a test of your ability to reason out and evaluate arguments.
- Most test-takers mistakenly approach it as a fact-regurgitation exam.
- Medical school admission committees can see your content knowledge from transcripts.
- What they want to see: how you think, especially under pressure.
- Your MCAT score tells them about your reasoning ability, not just what you've memorized.
📚 Content knowledge still matters—but differently
- You absolutely need to know science content, but not at the level most test-takers assume.
- The depth of knowledge required is more about understanding basics that can be applied flexibly.
- Science knowledge won't help on the Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS) section at all.
- Don't confuse: needing to know content vs. needing to memorize every detail—the MCAT emphasizes the former.
🏗️ Test structure and format
🖥️ Computer-based test characteristics
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Format | Computer-based, not adaptive (linear/fixed-form) |
| Length | 7.5 hours including breaks |
| Frequency | 28 times per year (Jan, Mar–Sep) |
| Registration | Online via AAMC, up to 6 months in advance |
| Security | Photo ID, electronic fingerprint, signature verification |
- Different test-takers see different versions on the same day.
- Questions are in predetermined order and don't change based on your answers.
- No proctoring; test administrator checks you in and assigns your computer seat.
📋 Four sections breakdown
- Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological Systems (Chem/Phys): 59 questions, 95 minutes
- Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS): 53 questions, 90 minutes
- Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems (Bio/Biochem): 59 questions, 95 minutes
- Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior (Psych/Soc): 59 questions, 95 minutes
- Optional 10-minute breaks between sections.
- Longer lunch break (30–45 minutes) available.
- Total test center time includes check-in (up to 40 minutes), tutorial (10 minutes), and post-test survey (10 minutes).
📝 Question distribution
- Passage-based questions: approximately 3/4 of science sections (all 53 CARS questions).
- Freestanding questions (FSQs): about 1/4 of science sections, appearing in groups of 4–5 questions.
- Passages include paragraphs plus equations, tables, graphs, figures, and experiments in science sections.
- CARS passages come from social sciences, humanities, ethics, philosophy, cultural studies, and population health—no content knowledge tested.
🎲 Scoring and the void option
📊 How scoring works
- Scaled exam: raw score converted to scaled score accounting for question difficulty.
- No "magic number" of correct answers needed for a particular score.
- No guessing penalty: always answer every question.
- Some questions are "experimental" and don't count toward your score.
- Different test versions have different scales to account for varying difficulty.
⚠️ The void decision
After completing the final section, you have 5 minutes to choose:
- "I wish to have my MCAT exam scored" OR
- "I wish to VOID my MCAT exam"
Void consequences:
- No numerical score ever (cannot "unvoid" later).
- Medical schools won't know you took the test.
- No refunds granted.
- If you don't choose within 5 minutes, test automatically scores.
🎯 What's a good score?
- Depends on your overall application package: GPA, coursework, letters of recommendation, medical field experience, extracurriculars, personal statement.
- Low GPA requires higher MCAT scores to compensate; strong GPA allows for lower scores.
- Medical schools want a complete package, not just scores and GPA.
🛠️ Test-taking tools and strategies
💻 Available CBT tools
| Tool | Function | Persistence |
|---|---|---|
| Highlighting | Click-drag in passage text | Does NOT persist after leaving passage |
| Strike-outs | Click answer choices to eliminate | DOES persist after leaving passage |
| Mark button | Flag questions for later review | Available throughout section |
| Review button | See all questions' status (answered/unanswered/marked) | Access anytime during section |
| Exhibit button | Open periodic table (resizable window) | Available throughout |
| Scratch paper | 4 pages (8 faces) provided; can request more | First set collected before receiving new |
📄 Organizing scratch paper effectively
- Indicate passage number in a box at top of work.
- Circle question numbers to the left of notes.
- Draw a line under work when changing passages.
- Don't erase or scribble—draw one line through incorrect work and start fresh.
- Keep organized; you may need to review questions later.
⏱️ Pacing strategies
Science sections:
- About 1 minute 35 seconds per question if completing all.
- At passage start: note allotted time and starting timer value.
- Write on scratch paper what timer should say at passage end.
- If running out of time: guess on remaining questions, make notes, mark questions, move on.
CARS section:
- About 1 minute 40 seconds per question.
- Most test-takers maximize score by NOT completing every passage.
- Good strategy: complete all but one passage, randomly guess on the last.
- Spend about 10 minutes per passage (adjust for difficulty and question count).
- Work passages in order of comfort—skip difficult ones first time through.
✂️ Process of Elimination (POE)
Since there's no guessing penalty, POE increases probability of correct answers:
- Strike out choices you're sure are incorrect.
- Jot notes on scratch paper to clarify thoughts.
- Use "Mark" button to flag for review (but in CARS, generally don't return to rethink).
- Don't leave blank—if you've spent >60 seconds, pick from remaining choices.
- If three choices eliminated, the fourth must be correct—click it and move on.
- MCAT only cares that you selected the right answer, not that you understand why.
📚 Question categories
🔬 Science section question types
| Type | Description | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Memory | Answered from prior knowledge | ~25% |
| Explicit | Answer explicitly stated in passage (definitions, graphs, simple connections) | ~35% |
| Implicit | Apply knowledge to new situations; answer implied by passage | ~40% |
- Implicit questions often start with "If… then…" constructions.
- Example: "If we modify the experiment like this, then what result would we expect?"
📖 CARS section question types
- Specific questions: Retrieval (facts from passage) or Inference (deduce what's likely true).
- General questions: Summarize themes (main idea, primary purpose) or evaluate author's opinion (tone/attitude).
- Reasoning questions: Describe purpose/support for statements (Structure) or judge argument quality (Evaluate).
- Application questions: Apply new information from question stem or answer choices to passage (New Information, Strengthen, Weaken, Analogy).
🎒 Test day preparation
📅 Before test day
- Visit test center 1–2 days before to find location, gauge traffic, check parking.
- Don't study heavily the day before.
- Get good sleep in nights leading up to test.
- Experiment with foods during practice tests to find what gives steady energy.
- Good snacks: sports drinks, peanut-butter crackers, trail mix.
🏢 Test day logistics
- Arrive at least 30 minutes before start time.
- Check-in order: arrival order.
- Assigned locker/secure area for personal items (no textbooks/notes allowed).
- ID checked, fingerprint taken digitally, sign in.
- Receive scratch paper and pencils (or request paper if given whiteboard).
- Assigned computer (cannot choose).
- Only allowed at station: photo ID, locker key, factory-sealed ear plugs.
☕ During breaks
- Fingerprint checked again when leaving/returning.
- Sign in and out.
- Can access locker items except notes and cell phones.
- Take the breaks—walk around, clear your head, get blood flowing.
- Request new scratch paper if needed.
- Scratch paper collected and shredded at test end.