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first-time pass strategy: the 12-week universal framework

a generic 12-week exam preparation framework that applies to any medical exam: baseline → build → target → simulate. adapt to your specific exam.

The Bottom Line

  • 12 weeks is enough for most medical exams — if you use a <strong>structured system</strong>, not just 'study more'.
  • The four phases: <strong>Baseline → Build → Target → Simulate</strong>.
  • The system works for PLAB, USMLE, MRCGP, AMC, MCCQE, MRCP, and any SBA/MCQ-format exam.
Every medical exam is different in content, but the preparation architecture is the same. You need to: know where you are (baseline), cover the blueprint (build), fix your weaknesses (target), and rehearse performance (simulate). This framework gives you the operational template — adapt the content to your specific exam, Q-bank, and clinical context.
1

Week 0 — Setup day (2–3 hours, once)

Choose your Q-bank. Download the exam blueprint. Take a timed baseline assessment (50–100 questions). Record: total score, weakest 5 topics, pacing (did you finish?). Set up your error log (spreadsheet, Notion, or paper). Book the exam if you haven't already.
2

Weeks 1–5 — Build phase (breadth)

Goal: cover the full exam blueprint at least once. Daily: 40–80 timed Q-bank questions + deep review of every question. Extract decision rules from wrong answers and store in your error log. At the end of each week: review your error log themes and note which topics keep appearing. Do not go deep on any single topic yet — you are mapping the terrain.
3

Week 6 — Mid-check

Take another timed assessment (same format as baseline). Compare scores. If improved ≥10%: your method is working, continue. If stalled: audit your review process — are you actually extracting rules from wrong answers, or just reading explanations? The mid-check is your course correction point.
4

Weeks 6–9 — Target phase (depth)

Goal: convert weak topics into passing topics. Use your error log to rank topics by 'marks lost'. Create focused blocks targeting your weakest 10–15 topics. Simultaneously: run daily mixed-topic sets (20–40 questions) to maintain breadth. The biggest score gains come from raising your worst topics, not polishing your best.
5

Weeks 10–11 — Simulate phase

Do 2–3 full-length mock exams under strict exam conditions (timing, no breaks outside allowed breaks, no phone). After each mock: 2–3 hours of theme-level error analysis. Extract the 10 most important lessons. Create final-week review cards for recurring themes.
6

Week 12 — Taper + exam

Mon–Wed: light error log review + one short timed block per day. Thu: review your 'Top 30 Rules' from the error log. Fri: rest, exam logistics, early sleep. Exam day: execute your system (pacing strategy, two-pass method, flagging). Post-exam: rest regardless of how you feel.

Adapting to your exam

PLAB/UKMLA: use NICE CKS-aligned Q-bank, MLA content map as blueprint. USMLE: UWorld as engine, NBME self-assessments for mid-check. MRCGP AKT: RCGP content areas, AKT-specific Q-bank. AMC CAT: Murtagh's + AMC Q-bank. MCCQE: Canadian Q-bank + CDM practice alongside MCQs. The framework is the same — the content plugs in.
  • Exam booked and date fixed.
  • Exam blueprint downloaded and reviewed.
  • Q-bank chosen and baseline assessment completed.
  • Error log set up and used daily.
  • Mid-check assessment scheduled at Week 6.
  • Weak topics identified and targeted in Weeks 6–9.
  • At least 2 full-length mocks scheduled in Weeks 10–11.
  • Final week: taper, not cram.
Practice

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SourceDunlosky et al. (2013) — Effective learning techniques: practice testing + distributed practice
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