The Bottom Line
- Step 2 CK is now the <strong>primary scored exam</strong> for residency — your score is a screening filter.
- The system: <strong>baseline → UWorld first pass → mid-check → weak-area sprints → second pass → mocks → exam</strong>.
- Most score plateaus are caused by <strong>poor review habits</strong>, not insufficient question volume.
With Step 1 now pass/fail, Step 2 CK is the exam that determines your residency competitiveness. The difference between a 240 and a 260 is not 'more questions' — it is a better feedback loop. This guide gives you the operational system, not just a reading list.
1
Week 0 — Baseline + setup (1 day)
Take a full-length NBME Self-Assessment or UWorld Self-Assessment under strict timed conditions. Record the score, your weakest 5 systems, and your pacing (did you finish with time or run out?). This is your map — everything else is navigation.
2
Weeks 1–6 — UWorld first pass (the engine)
Do 2–3 timed blocks daily (40 Qs each). After each block, spend equal time on review. For every wrong answer: write the rule you missed, the discriminator, and the management step. Store these in an error log (spreadsheet, Notion, or Anki). Do not make beautiful notes — make retrievable rules.
3
Week 7 — Mid-check self-assessment
Take another NBME. Compare to baseline. If you improved ≥10 points, your system is working — keep going. If stalled, your review process is the problem: you are doing questions but not converting misses into corrected reasoning. Fix the loop before adding volume.
4
Weeks 7–10 — Weak-system sprints
Your error log reveals your weak systems (commonly: biostatistics, obstetrics, paediatrics, psychiatry for many IMGs). Create focused 40-question blocks in those systems. The goal: convert 50% subjects into 65%+ subjects. This is where the biggest score gains live — not in polishing your strong areas.
5
Weeks 10–13 — Second pass + mixed sets
Do UWorld incorrects and marked questions. Simultaneously, run daily mixed-topic timed blocks to maintain breadth and test transfer. If a topic keeps recurring in your error log after the second pass, it needs a different approach: read a concise reference, then immediately re-test.
6
Weeks 13–14 — Final mocks + consolidation
Two full-length simulations under strict timing. After each: 2–3 hours of error analysis, not question-by-question review but theme extraction ('I keep missing drug interactions', 'I misread paediatric dosing stems'). Final 3 days: light error log review, rest, exam logistics. No new material.
The 3-minute debrief (use after every wrong answer)
(1) What cue in the stem should have triggered the right pathway? (2) What is the discriminating feature that separates the right answer from my answer? (3) What will I do differently next time? If you can't write this in under 3 minutes, your learning artefact is too complex.
The 'more resources' trap
When scores stall, the instinct is to add Amboss, Divine Intervention, Step 2 Secrets, and Boards & Beyond on top of UWorld. More resources rarely fix plateaus. Better review of fewer resources does. If UWorld isn't working, audit your review process before changing your resource stack.
- Baseline self-assessment taken before starting (non-negotiable).
- UWorld blocks always timed — no untimed tutor mode after week 2.
- Error log updated daily with rules, not just corrections.
- Mid-check self-assessment at week 6–7.
- Weak systems identified by week 3 and actively targeted.
- Second pass covers incorrects + marked, not the full bank.
- At least 2 full-length mocks in final 2 weeks.
- Final 72 hours: 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.
SourceUSMLE — Step 2 CK content description and specifications
Open Link SourceNBME — Clinical Science Self-Assessments (CCSSA)
Open Link SourceDunlosky et al. (2013) — Learning techniques utility review
Open Link