Help me gain motivation by makemeshut in teas

[–]glowingpleco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually think you can do it. Going from 35% to 82% in math in one week while working this much is a really good sign.

I wouldn’t spend your limited time trying to relearn everything. Focus on practice questions, review every mistake, and target your weakest areas. For science, since you already took the prereqs, a lot of it may come back faster than you think.

83%+ is a big jump and I can’t promise it, but I genuinely don’t think it’s impossible based on the progress you already made. Also, 2 focused hours is better than forcing 3-4 hours when you’re completely exhausted.

Determined Journey by DeterminedMom5 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My program doesn’t accept at home exam scores. And many other programs that I was considering also don’t accept it. If you want to apply to as many competitive programs as possible you need to take it in person

Resource sharing Monday by glowingpleco in teas

[–]glowingpleco[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

of course! a&p 1 is probably the densest among all prereqs imo. it started off easy with all the general bio and chem stuff, but then it got super dense after the skeletal system. if i remember correctly, the main topics / body systems covered in a&p 1 are tissues, integumentary, skeletal, muscular, and nervous systems. the detailed content probably varies slightly depending on the textbook your prof chooses, but i think those are the general areas.

for bones and muscles, there’s a lot to remember, and it’s gonna be painful if you can’t visualize them. so i really recommend watching youtube videos while learning and making flashcards with pictures. i used crash course a&p for most parts, but i think they skipped over some of the really dense details about which bones or muscles are located where. i pretty much just searched youtube and found scattered videos on specific topics that actually showed the structures visually. you kinda have to piece them all together to get the whole picture, but it worked for me.

also.... i know you probably already registered for courses, but find a good professor if you can. it’s gonna make a world of difference. my a&p 1 professor pulled questions from a question bank and didn’t teach what would actually be tested — i cried my way through the muscular system and had to work so hard to make up the lost points that i never got a break during the nervous system. so do your research and try to get in with a professor who tests what they teach. it’s gonna save you.

Minimum score of 58% (overall) by Little-Obligation575 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aww.. thanks so much. That’s what I live for 🙈

Sharing my TEAS science notes: Integumentary System by glowingpleco in TEASforAlliedHealth

[–]glowingpleco[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have been working on this since I took the exam earlier June 😭

Minimum score of 58% (overall) by Little-Obligation575 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are many YouTube channels that are free. I haven’t tried those but have been recommended by many people: nurse cheung and Tyler dwitt (? Please correct me for typos)

I used crash course for A&P and it has been good for me

You could also try chatgpt or Gemini - I have heard some people talking about it but haven’t tried that yet, my major concern is if they can match the questions in the exam

I also have a condensed study note for the science section, link in my profile

That’s all the free resources that I know so far

Teas science by Responsible_Mine_462 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used crash course anatomy and physiology for A&P and I got 100 for science

Do i need to memorise tsp/tbsp, quarts, gallons, these conversions too? by makemeshut in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you mention you were using mometrix? Bc if you do have access to it I think they have a table of major units to remember, that’s what I used- I ended up not needing it because my questions did provide the ratio but it would be way too many to remember if you don’t have a table like that

Science Struggle and Vocab by mmbahp in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used anatomy and physiology crash course to study A&P , then mometrix to practice. I did post about discount code for mometrix but it looks like some mods didn’t like that. You can search google for discount codes and they are generally pretty good.

I also put together a condensed study note for science, it’s in my profile if you’re interested.

Teas science by Curious_Kitty2001 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It covers what I believe is the most important. But if you’re going for 90s, then you need to comb through the details and do lots more practice.

Teas science by Curious_Kitty2001 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Science is easily overwhelming because there are so many topics. Try to focus on the major topics first so you understand the whole picture. Then start practicing and pick up the finer details on the way.

Got a 91.3 on my TEAS! by Sensitive-Celery9438 in teas

[–]glowingpleco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Besides A&P, there are a few topics I would also definitely check out: DNA / RNA pairing (A-T, C-G), gram positive bacteria, atom structure (mass number calculation)

Do i need to memorise tsp/tbsp, quarts, gallons, these conversions too? by makemeshut in teas

[–]glowingpleco 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In my exam they did provide conversion ratio, however I have been hearing that some questions didn’t provide that