just finished your bio/biochem playlist, and now im here. im testing in a day, and i honestly want to say through all the resources i burnt through, you stand alone in how effectively and clearly you relay these high yield topics. if anyone deserved to get into med school, amidst the gruelling admissions process, it was you!!!
i ended up scoring a whole five points lower than my FL average (i scored a 510). nonetheless im happy and proud of whatever i got, but i don't know how this affects my chances.@@narutozzz6166
goated video honestly brother i knew nothing about this topic beforehand and u taught me so well i got the last problem right using the same logic u did at the end felt amazing im gonna check out the rest of your channel now.
I just wanna say I found your videos three days before testing and have been binge watching to help close some gaps before testing. Your videos are so clear and flow so well! I hope you’re prospering in medical school! Thank you!! 🙏🏽
@@christophersalgado9068 Most likely, yes. If a calculation is too complex and involves lots of decimals, often the AAMC will give the answer in a form like: A) [(1 mol)(8.314 J/mol*K)(300 K)]/(1 atm) That being said, if you memorize 8 J/mol*K, 8.314 is not too much more effort.
@@zohaibsyed21 Agreed for the majority of questions! Sometimes answers will be somewhat close and you'll need to remember if you rounded up or down and how that might have changed your calculation.
just finished your bio/biochem playlist, and now im here. im testing in a day, and i honestly want to say through all the resources i burnt through, you stand alone in how effectively and clearly you relay these high yield topics. if anyone deserved to get into med school, amidst the gruelling admissions process, it was you!!!
Hi! How did you do?
i ended up scoring a whole five points lower than my FL average (i scored a 510). nonetheless im happy and proud of whatever i got, but i don't know how this affects my chances.@@narutozzz6166
Wow, thank you for the kind comment! This really made my day. I'm not sure how I didn't see this earlier.
goated video honestly brother i knew nothing about this topic beforehand and u taught me so well i got the last problem right using the same logic u did at the end felt amazing im gonna check out the rest of your channel now.
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it!
I just wanna say I found your videos three days before testing and have been binge watching to help close some gaps before testing. Your videos are so clear and flow so well! I hope you’re prospering in medical school! Thank you!! 🙏🏽
Thank you so much! Your comment really brightened my day. As always, if you have any questions, feel free to leave them under any of my videos.
These videos are fantastic! I hope you continue to upload videos! This is top quality
Thank you!
you my friend are built different, watching your videos as a last minute review for my MCAT on friday, very helpful
This is one of the best compliments I have received, haha!:)
This really brought everything together
I'm glad it helped!
Thank you! This was very helpful.
Glad it was helpful!
Hi! great videos! does this section of your playlist cover the physical and chemical foundations of the MCAT?
It should, yes, if you are on the Chem/Phys playlist!
Hi! Your R constant for Arrhenius is wrong, It is 8.314 not 8.134
Thanks for pointing that out! You're absolutely right.
@@medcatmcat For the MCAT, we can probably get away with just using R as 8 right?
@@christophersalgado9068 idk if u still need this advice but close enough is good enough for the mcat (gravity = 10, pi = 3, etc)
@@christophersalgado9068 Most likely, yes. If a calculation is too complex and involves lots of decimals, often the AAMC will give the answer in a form like:
A) [(1 mol)(8.314 J/mol*K)(300 K)]/(1 atm)
That being said, if you memorize 8 J/mol*K, 8.314 is not too much more effort.
@@zohaibsyed21 Agreed for the majority of questions! Sometimes answers will be somewhat close and you'll need to remember if you rounded up or down and how that might have changed your calculation.
Reaction coordinate diagrams bringing me bad deja vu...
Agreed! Haha
you're so tough bro