An MCAT passage may outwardly resemble a scientific article, but a scientific journal won't make itself difficult to understand on purpose. Within an MCAT passage, things are difficult on purpose all the time. The person writing an MCAT passage is like your opponent in game theory. They are making puzzles from topical and interdisciplinary learning goals you encounter in the flow of reading. You can learn to recognize these puzzles and even learn to predict most of the questions coming ahead of time. To prepare you for MCAT mastery, we have developed an interdisciplinary content review video course encompassing the topical and interdisciplinary goals of the test. For applying your knowledge in exam conditions, we teach a method called MCAT Passage Reader Response in Premed Village.
In a spiraling curriculum, important themes are introduced early, and returned to with greater sophistication as the course progresses. Following AAMC's "Foundations of Living Systems" philosophy, years of teaching and development have produced a content review here relevant to the deeper learning goals of the MCAT. Physics unfolds into chemistry in this MCAT course, building a physical sciences foundation purpose-made for understanding biochemistry as the course progresses. Each AAMC topic is covered "in itself" in the course sequence but also "for the rest" in the light of important interdisciplinary themes.
AAMC's Foundations of Living Systems approach to MCAT design has the purpose of helping you remediate undergraduate science before medical school. In the textbook paradigm the general sciences are taught as modular, disconnected courses by the separate departments. You can take them in any order. However, the world of medical school reflects the molecular biology revolution. The paradigm has shifted. Whenever a biological process occurs, physics and chemistry facts are always changing too. In addition to topical goals, the MCAT is designed to reflect interdisciplinary learning goals. MCAT passage mastery reflects a unified, scientific imagination.
Premed Village is actually John Wetzel's third MCAT course. After graduating from Stanford in the early 1990's, he made a live coure in Atlanta called MCAT Academy and then created an online course, WikiPremed, which became popular for the old exam. After 2015, John taught students full and part-time for nearly a decade in the making of Premed Village.
John has spent many years developing and promoting interdisciplinary science for premeds because it will make everyone better doctors. It is a life-long calling. John also sometimes works as a kind of contract consultant in pharma. John's last position was to serve as QC Writing Manager for the Bill and Melinda Gates Medical Research Institute (Gates-MRI). Gates-MRI has a number of preventatives and cures under development for malaria, TB, and RSV. John helped the Institute build their new medical writing department and served as a kind of scientific and technical editor of the protocols, statistical analysis plans, etc. produced by the clinical trials Gates-MRI during his time there.
John is now back to this project for interdisciplinary science education which began long ago at MCAT Academy. Development has been continuous for decades. From the beginning, the creative drive for teaching ideas always has come from live teaching where there is the motivation to find the language and structure of presentation to help the student understand. After teaching the new MCAT nearly 100 times since 2015 in one-on-one tutoring, the MCAT course here at Premed Village is finally ready for a wider audience.
The open resources are up and functioning. An affordable social learning environment is coming January 2025, with live events, study groups, and office hours.