Anatomy and physiology textbooks are certainly plentiful. Definitely would own at least one anatomy and one physiology textbook:
- Anatomy - Gray's Anatomy for Students; simple, to the point, no BS. Netter's Clinical Anatomy is also very much on point.
- Physiology - there are two textbooks, both of which I really like:
- Guyton and Hall - this is the one so many students swear by, and it is certainly a legendary textbook. There is a fair amount of detail to this but is explained very well.
- Boron - this is (in my opinion) the best medical physiology textbook, but it does take some getting used to. This textbook is quite thick, and teaches everything from first principles so you actually understand the stuff amazingly well although you do need to spend a little time reading it. Once you get past that initial "wtf" moment you realise how brilliant it is.
- Pathology
- Robbins and Cotran is probably my go-to reference book here. Wouldn't be reading this cover to cover, but is certainly a very helpful reference that goes back to first principles.
The lecture notes work as a pretty good summary and is a window into what exam questions the lecturer might set.
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Funny - I only learnt about ANKI this year. Absolute
godsend of an app. Used it more often than I have ever used a flashcard app.
I used ANKI heavily whilst studying for my BPT written exams - was an absolute gem. Cannot recommend it enough.
Accumulate flashcards throughout the year - when you notice you keep forgetting a particular fact you want to be able to pull out of your head instantly, stick it straight onto your flashcards.
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Note taking - the main purpose of note taking is to help you actually pay attention to what you are digesting/reading. Diagrams, flowcharts and figures are your friend. To be honest, what I'd say here is - whatever study methods you used at school, use those, they served you well enough to get into med school, continue using those methods.