FEATURING: Written Practice Exam
250 questions timed at 60 seconds each. Questions cover fundamental concepts associated with the CREOG, ABOG or AOBOG exams.
For ABOG 2017 WRITTEN Exam Candidates
The exam is NEXT month – EEE GADS! For those of you finishing your residency, the end-of-year projects and deadlines will really compete with your remaining study time. You MUST be organized to be able to keep all those balls in the air.
It is your responsibility to schedule a seat with the Pearson VUE testing center. Seats were released after March 25, but may not be scheduled after June 3. Seats are limited and are assigned on a “first come, first served” basis.
You need to do some soul searching and accept the fact that you simply will not be able to cover all the topics on your study plan. Have you finished the MUST KNOW topics? Our Test Topics Manual is a great resource, as it lists high-yield topics and the expected test questions. Revise your study plan weekly and begin to discard those low yield topics. Plan to FINISH your ENTIRE review in MAY, as June will focus on strengthening your strengths. Tap into our Online Review Course as it is perfect timing. We will provide you with content, strategy and over 400 questions.
You must practice with WRITTEN questions at the end of each study topic. Our Written Question Manuals are designed for exactly this. They are organized by topic so you can beeline right to the questions to cross check your subject review. Included are 1000+ questions, plus a narrative explanation for each answer, along with references. Another complement to your content review is our Written Exam Webinar archives. You complete 20 questions first, then follow along with our faculty-led interactive discussion of the answers incorporating our signature test taking skills strategy. We will blast you with 350+ written exam questions based on those high yield subjects.
Since your exam is computerized, you must practice with tests of this same format. Processing questions on a computer screen is quite different than with the comforting familiar paper format. ABC, in collaboration with Jolley Test Prep Services, offers computerized diagnostic tests containing 500+ written exam questions. Each question has a narrative explanation and reference, so it’s a great learning resource as well. Not only will you get your score, but the computer will also analyze why you missed the questions. Better yet, it will search for error patterns and make recommendations for corrective action.
Finally, like any big performance, a dress rehearsal is a must. Our Practice Test simulates your exam. It has 250 questions timed for 3 hours and 45 minutes with 2 breaks.
You can do it, we can help.
Test Taking Technique:
For ABOG 2017 ORAL Exam Candidates
Applications for the 2017 exam are now closed. Your examination fee of $975 and case list are due by August 1st, 2017. Unfortunately, the examination fee is in addition to the application fee that you already forked over. Simply go online to www.abog.org to complete this nuisance, but necessary, task.
Only ONE MONTH LEFT to complete your collection of cases. At this point, you must be up-to-date with all of your past OB and GYN entries. The clock is ticking. You must now enter cases no less than EVERY WEEK.
At this point, you should have three-fourths, if not all, of your office patients selected. Plan to complete all 40 categories by the end of May and try to use as many categories as possible.
A well-constructed list makes all the difference in its defense. Order your copy of the brand new 5th edition of Pass Your Oral Ob/Gyn Board Exam by Dr. Das for a complete step-by-step guide.
Since so much is riding on your case list, consider getting the expert’s stamp of approval. The ABC faculty can provide a Comprehensive Case List Review and give construction tips on every single case. Unique only to ABC, the reviewer will then give you a call to review construction highlights and give you a chance to ask questions. Send whatever you have NOW, as it is a first-come-first-served basis and we get over-run starting in mid-June. Your goal is to review and incorporate your reviewer’s recommendations by June 30th.
Before you are all consumed with finishing your case list, be proactive and register for your fall review course in Charlotte now. We suggest our ORAL EXAM ONLY course September 13-17, 2017. If you discover later that you have a December or January exam, we’ll let you switch over to our November 15-19 course. We’re not just a review course, but a BOARD review course, to provide an exam focused review. Ideally, complement the content covered at the review course with an Oral Exam Workshop devoted to defending your case list.
Don’t worry about studying at all this month. Your priority is to finish that case list. “Git R Done!”
Case List Construction Tip:
For Subspecialist Candidates for the 2017 ABOG General Oral Board Exam
If you are retrospectively collecting cases, go with your comfort zone. Dang, how could you have forgotten so much in such a short time? Unfortunately, it’s true, if you don’t use it, you lose it. Go with the bread-and-butter cases. Remember, this is your general boards. We recommend you chose those cases that reflect high-yield topics. Our Test Topics Manual and Pass Your Oral Ob/Gyn Board Exam by Dr. Das are excellent step-by-step guides. Dr. Das even has a section in her book just for subspecialists.
Since so much is riding on your case list, consider getting the expert’s stamp of approval. The ABC faculty can provide a Comprehensive Case List Review and give construction tips on every single case. Unique only to ABC, the reviewer will then give you a call to review construction highlights and give you a chance to ask questions
Send whatever you have NOW, as it is a first come, first-served basis and we get over-run starting in mid-June.
Case List Construction Tip:
Chief Residents Planning an ABOG Subspecialty Fellowship
Subspecialty fellows are permitted to select 20 patients from their Chief resident year for their off specialty case list. In other words, GYN Oncologists, REI and Urogynecologists will need an OB list and MFMs need a GYN list. Thus, make sure to hold onto that residency case log!
Refer to the ABOG Bulletin as to how those 20 patients are selected. To be on the safe side, we recommend you collect at least 40, so you can strategically select the final 20 later. For those patients, keep a file of the following: for the GYN patients, collect the H&Ps, operative notes, pathology reports and discharge summaries. For the OB patients, keep a file of the prenatal forms, delivery notes, discharge summaries and postpartum notes. Don’t worry about the office patients at all, as you may compile this only during your fellowship.
A word of caution – right now you are at your peak for general OB/GYN knowledge. Believe it or not, two years from now, your knowledge base will regress to that of an intern. Yes, it’s true, if you don’t use it, you lose it. So those really cool, esoteric, bizarre, once-in-a-career cases now will be a nightmare to defend later. Your greatest allies are your junior residents. If they can’t easily defend that case, cease and desist and “go fish” for another.
Test Taking Technique:
For AOBOG 2017 & 2018 ORAL Exam Candidates
Applications submitted March 1 – July 17, 2017, require the standard fee of $3275, which must be included with the application. AOBOG hasn’t yet published dates for the spring, 2018 exam.
After many years, the AOBOG oral exam underwent a major overhaul in 2015. They’ve changed the core topics from the traditional 10. Although they’ve kept some of the original, they’ve added some, and generalized others to much broader categories. Here are the new categories:
- Office Based
- Hospital Based
- Maternity Based
- Gynecologic Oncology:
- Neoplasms of the Vulva, Vagina, Cervix, Uterus, Fallopian tubes, Ovaries and those associated with Pregnancy
- Female Medicine and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery
- Urinary Stress Incontinence/Genital Prolapse
- Sexual Dysfunction/Pain Syndromes
- Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
- Contraception Management
- Ultrasonography of the Female Pelvis
- Workup and Treatment of the Infertile Couple
- Maternal-Fetal Medicine:
- Evaluation of the High-Risk Pregnancy
- Early Screening Tests and Diagnosis
- Interventions Available during Pregnancy
Osteopathic Philosophy and Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine will be assessed regarding treatment modalities for both the obstetric and the gynecologic patient.
Also, the conduct has been changed. Although it’s still 4 hours, the candidate now rotates hourly to each of four stations. Three exam stations will use three scenarios developed from the topic list. A fourth exam station will include visual slides, ultrasounds, video clips or monitor strips to introduce the essay type scoring.
For those of you taking your exam this fall, our September 13-17 course is strategically timed just before your exam. Obviously we’re a bit biased, as we feel we have the ideal course; however, you should look for certain features. We recommend a BOARD review course, not just a review course, for an exam focused review. There is precious little time to wade through the volumes of material to figure out what to prioritize. Did you know our syllabus is highlighted with the core topics?
For those of you preparing for your spring, 2018 exam, launch your studying by attending either our September 13-17 or November 15-19 course.
Since 2011, we’re batting 99% pass rate for those who have attended our review course and/or our oral exam webinar!
You can do it, we can help.
Test Taking Tips:
ABOG Maintenance of Certification (MOC) Candidates
Part II: Lifelong Learning
Your taxes are done or did you file an extension? Unfortunately, ABOG is not as generous as the IRS and just published the 2nd quarter articles. Of course, you can extend or drag out those first quarter articles all the way up until the December 15th deadline, but WHY? You need to finish up those first quarter articles and start working on the 2nd quarter ones.
Part III: Secure Written Exam
For those of you in MOC Year 6, you must pass a written exam by December 15th, 2017. We have three products to help you prepare for and pass your written exam. For those of you who have always tapped into a review course in preparing for your board certifying exams, you’ll take great comfort in our five-day review courses, September 13-17 and November 19-20. This is not the same type of review course from the past. Just as you’ve evolved and practice evidence-based medicine, our course is designed for the adult learner, is exam-focused, and all lectures follow the national ACOG guidelines. Heck, you’ll walk away with loads of everyday practice tips, too.
You are also accountable for Safety and Professionalism. Remember, you completed the Safety course in your third year, but you could not print out the articles. Fortunately, ABC had the foresight to create a Safety Course Manual.
Oh, just in case you think you’re coasting after you pass your written exam, think again. You still have to read the 2017 articles. No rest for the weary!
Test Taking Tip:
- Obstetrics and Gynecology and Office Practice & Women’s Health
- Obstetrics only
- Gynecology only (tends to have more Surgical GYN focus)
- Office Practice and Women’s Health only (primary care, office GYN & family planning focus)
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Gynecologic Oncology
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Maternal Fetal Medicine
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Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility
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Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstructive Surgery (starting 2019)
- Obstetrics – Antepartum, Intrapartum, Postpartum.
- Gynecology only- Inpatient & Outpatient GYN focus, including REI, Urogyn and Oncology
- Office Practice and Women’s Health only - primary care, office GYN, office surgery & family planning focus
- Safety
- Anatomy & Physiology, Basic Sciences
- Genetics
- Ethics & Professionalism
AOBOG Osteopathic Continuous Certification in Obstetrics & Gynecology (OCC)
The OCC written exam is now computerized and offered annually during the week of March 6-11 at all Pearson VUE centers. However, the examination can be taken during the last two years of the OCC cycle, but you must pass the written exam by the end of your six-year cycle. Come to one of our fall courses – either September 13-17 or November 15-19 to jump start your studying.
Additionally, you need to complete Practice Performance Assessments (PPA) in a six year OCC cycle. More importantly, you must complete 3 PPA modules before you can take your written exam. Since these modules take some time to complete, we strongly recommend you begin a module in your first year of your OCC cycle and complete one module every year.
Test Taking Tip:
CREOG In-service training exam participants
Well, the exam is not for another eight months. If you scored > 200, regardless of your PGY year, you’re in pretty good shape. It’s going to get hectic with the end of the residency year coming up and everyone preparing to move up in rank.
If you scored < 200, you are below the mean. Although CREOG will not reveal statistics, we have found that your performance level, regardless of your year, will continue. In other words, you PGY3s cannot use the excuse of being post call or on the Oncology service as the reason for poor performance. You need to be proactive to improve your score during your chief year. If you have scored < 200, or worse yet, < 190, all three years, you need to take corrective measures to improve your test taking skills. To simply study more is probably not the solution. We can connect you with our Education Specialists, Martin and Jane Jolley, for a one-on-one evaluation. Just give us a call.
ABOG no longer reports the score for the written board exam. Unfortunately, now the only predictor of your performance is your CREOG score. Therefore, you must take it very seriously. Our November 15-19 Course is the perfect time to prepare your assault, and nail the exam in January.
Taking Tips:
Royal Canadian College 2017 Exam Candidates
This year the written examination is May 2-3 at your local Centre. Followed by the oral examination on May 16. Therefore, do not wait for the written examination to be done before you start practicing for your oral exam!
As you head into your MCQs remember to manage your time wisely, you have about 1min per question and if you don’t know, take a guess, there is no penalty. Erase the answer COMPLETELY if you change your answer, the sheet is read by an optical scanner. Lastly, frequently go back to ensure that the question number goes with were you are filling the circle. You don’t want to be off by one question, as all your answers will be wrong…
Test Taking Tips for the OSCE Exam:
MFM 2017 ORAL Exam Candidates
It’s still early in the process, but you’re smart to start thinking about this now. Next April will be here before you know it. What should you be working on right now? If you haven’t done so already, this is a great time to just get organized. You should have a clear idea about which project you’re submitting as your thesis. Do you have your thesis affidavit signed by your program director? You’ll need a copy of that, and PD’s are busy folks, so it might be a good idea to try and snag that signature now. It’s also a good time to download the ABOG bulletin so you know exactly how to format your thesis, and your case lists. You should also be looking around for interesting cases to compile – it never hurts to have too many cases, you can always comb through the list and choose the best ones later. The more you prepare now, the easier it will be when the deadlines approach!
FPMRS 2017 ORAL Exam Candidates
Now is a great time to start thinking about strategy for exam taking. The subspecialty exam is similar to the general oral exam in many ways, except now it is something that you are much more familiar with. Start by gathering cases, flagging office cases that add to the variety of your list. Additionally, contacting the medical records personnel at your institution to familiarize yourself with the process of pulling surgical records will make your life easier when the time comes to compose your list. Regarding your thesis, if you have not published yet, it might be a good time to fine-tune the manuscript.
You have plenty of time so form a study plan now and contact study buddies so that when the time comes, you have all ducks in a row.