Hi, I will be using Limmer/ Keefe's Brady Emergency Care (10th Edition) for my EMT-B class next semester. Could you advise me some study tips that will help me to do well on tests? Will the "Review Questions" from the end of each chapter help me to prepare for tests?
P.S. Last semester, I took this course for one week, and this one professor kinda scared me by saying the exams are not that easy as I thought. :/
First of all, there are hundreds of thousands of us who have successfully completed the tests, so yes, it is "passable". How easy or hard a time you have is entirely up to you. For God's sakes, yes; use the Review Questions, get the study guide, have your lab partner read the text and question you, in short, the better you understand the text and the
concepts they refer to, the better off you'll be. Also, and I've said it a million times, get those skill sheets from the NREMT web site and know them inside out, upside down and backwards. They will save your butt, if not on the test, then in the real world of EMS later on. Use resources like
www.emtb.com and the practice tests. Don't just blindly memorize the test questions, if you get one wrong, make sure you understand
why you got it wrong. Study takes time, and a good bit of it. Not "watching TV or texting or talking on the phone while I study" time, I'm meaning quiet environment, dedicated, thoughtful quality time with the books. This is a test to measure you against minimum standards, and if you think once you pass the test you can sell the books on E-Bay and succeed, you are sadly mistaken and (IMHO) wasting your time taking the class. To paraphase the wise Bossy, how bad do you want it, and are you willing to work hard to get it? Now regarding your instructor's comment: How could you form an opinion regarding the difficulty of the final when you only attended for one week? Furthermore, with adaptive testing, no two tests are alike (for the most part), everything depends on you knowing the material and understanding the concepts (there's that word again) behind them. You will find the resources here are nearly unlimited. We won't give you answers to the exams we've sat through, but we can explain the rationale behind them. As far as the test itself, get through the class first, then worry about the test. Best of luck in your studies, and remember there's no such thing as a dumb question. If you don't understand it, chances are that another of our student-members is having trouble, too. Regards, TF
P.S. In no way did I intend to imply anything negative about you personally. My comments (and time spent on the soapbox) are intended as open comments about anyone considering taking the EMT curriculum. We're here to help, all you have to do is ask. Best of luck to you and all the other future EMT's!