The Bottom Line
- Step 2 CK is the <strong>primary scored exam</strong> for residency selection since Step 1 went pass/fail.
- Your target score depends on specialty: ≥240 for less competitive, ≥250+ for competitive specialties.
- The strategy is <strong>timed Q-bank execution + systematic error correction</strong> — not passive review.
With Step 1 now pass/fail, Step 2 CK carries the scoring weight for IMG residency applications. Program directors use it as a screening filter — many programs have explicit or unofficial minimum score thresholds. This means your preparation strategy should be optimised for score maximisation, not just passing.
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Step 1 — Establish your baseline (Week 1)
Take a full-length NBME Self-Assessment or UWorld Self-Assessment under timed conditions before you start studying. This number is your starting position. If you skip this step, you are navigating without a map — you cannot measure progress against time.
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Step 2 — Build around UWorld (Weeks 2–10)
UWorld is the engine. Do 2–3 timed blocks daily (40 questions each), then deep-review every question (including ones you got right but were uncertain about). The review matters more than the doing. For each wrong answer: write the rule you missed, the discriminator, and the management step you would now take. Keep this in an error log.
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Step 3 — Add a secondary resource for weak systems (Weeks 4–10)
After 2–3 weeks of UWorld, your error log will reveal your weak systems (commonly: biostatistics/epidemiology, obstetrics, paediatrics, or psychiatry for many IMGs). Use one concise reference — Amboss articles, Step 2 Secrets, or Divine Intervention podcasts — targeted at those systems only. Do not add more resources across the board.
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Step 4 — Midpoint Self-Assessment (Week 6–7)
Take another NBME Self-Assessment. Compare to your baseline. If your score has improved by ≥10 points, your method is working — keep going. If it has stalled, your review process is broken — you are doing questions but not correcting the underlying reasoning errors.
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Step 5 — Second pass + weak-area sprints (Weeks 8–12)
Do a second pass of UWorld incorrects and marked questions. Simultaneously, run focused 40-question blocks in your weakest 3 subjects. The goal is to convert your 50% subjects into 65%+ subjects — this is where the biggest score gains live.
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Step 6 — Final stretch (Weeks 12–14)
Two full-length simulations under strict timing. Review error themes, not individual questions. In the final week: light review of your error log, rest, and exam logistics. Do not cram new material in the last 72 hours.
Score prediction
NBME Self-Assessments and UWorld Self-Assessment correlate reasonably well with actual scores, typically within a range. Use them as directional indicators — if your self-assessments are consistently ≥250, you are likely in a strong position. If they fluctuate by more than 15 points between attempts, your knowledge is inconsistent and needs stabilising.
The 'more resources' trap
The single most common IMG mistake is adding resources when scores stall. More resources ≠ higher scores. Better review of the same resource = higher scores. If UWorld isn't working, the problem is almost always in your review process, not the question bank.
Score-maximisation habits
- Every question block is timed (no 'untimed tutor mode' after week 2).
- Error log updated daily with rules, not just corrections.
- Weak systems identified by week 3 and actively targeted.
- At least 2 NBME Self-Assessments spaced 4–6 weeks apart.
- Second pass covers incorrects + marked questions, not the full bank again.
- Final week is rest + light review, not panic cramming.
Practice
Test your knowledge
Apply this concept immediately with a high-yield question block from the iatroX Q-Bank.