UMAT Preperation Guide
UMAT Preperation Guide
UMAT Preperation Guide
Table of Contents
Section 1 2
Section 2 3
Section 3 4
Feelings (emotions)
Thoughts (perspectives)
Behaviours (manner)
Intentions (concerns)
Reflective monologues
Personal conversations
Doctor-patient interactions
UMAT Preparation Guide 2017 Bala Anand
3
S3 - NON-VERBAL REASONING
This methodology of reading contrasts with how you may read when
preparing for school exams. For school, we read to memorise. In the
UMAT exam we want to read to simplify and only return for detail.
Avoid getting caught up on scientific, medical and statistical
terminology or numbers that arent vital to your understanding.
Students who try to read faster may lock themselves into an invariable
speed that stops them from properly understanding the concepts. Think
of it like a racing track. Be willing to vary your speed according to the
natural bumps and turns you encounter in the stimuli. Studies have
shown no indication that speed plays a significant part in students
performance.
The UMAT exam requires ways of thinking that are unique to it. When
you first start practicing, you are trying to learn from and adapt to the
question styles. You want to concentrate on forming the appropriate
way of thinking rather than trying to think fast. Therefore it is best to
attempt practice papers without any time constraints.
1. Find and master your own style regarding how you physically
interact with the paper. Examples include underlining key words
in the stimuli or the question, underlining the question stem and
crossing out answer options etc.
Exam techniques are how we make our exam strategies specific to the
UMAT exam. In this booklet we go through two of the main techniques.
Elimination method
Modality analysis
A key skill required in the UMAT exam is staying within the scope
defined by the information provided. To do this we must understand the
difference between an answer option that is logically sound and one
that is undeniably true. Say, for example, a study revealed that 10% of
Australian doctors have depression. It is logical to consider that 10% of
all doctors worldwide have depression or that being a doctor causes
depression, however these are not necessarily true. An undeniably true
answer would be that at least 1 in 10 Australian doctors have a mental
health problem.