ukcat essentials applicant guide for medicine and dentistry entry 2011 sample
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Sample showing the first 10 pages of the UKCAT Essentials Applicant Guide for Medicine and Dentistry Entry 2011. Covers UKCAT exam basics, preparation tips and details on how universities use your UKCAT scores for admissions.TRANSCRIPT
UKCAT Essentials
Applicant GuideMedicine and Dentistry
Masuda Rahman
UKCATPrep.comwww.ukcatprep.com
Published 2010 in Great Britain
© Masuda Rahman, Emedica 2010
The right of Masuda Rahman to be identified as author of this work has beenasserted by her in accordance with the copyright,
designs and patents act 1988.
All rights reserved.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 1
Contents
Contents ...................................................................................................1Introduction...............................................................................................2The Test....................................................................................................2Candidates required to sit the UKCAT......................................................4Registration, Booking and Fees................................................................4Special Arrangements ..............................................................................6Preparation ...............................................................................................6Results......................................................................................................7Allowance for unusual circumstances.......................................................7How the results are used for admissions ..................................................8University of Aberdeen, School of Medicine .............................................9Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry .........................9University of Birmingham, School of Medicine........................................10Brighton and Sussex Medical School .....................................................10University of Bristol, Faculty of Medicine ................................................11University of Cambridge, School of Clinical Medicine.............................11Cardiff University, School of Medicine ....................................................11University of Dundee, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing .........12University of Durham ..............................................................................12University of East Anglia .........................................................................12The University of Edinburgh, The Faculty of Medicine............................13University of Glasgow, Faculty of Medicine ............................................13Hull York Medical School ........................................................................14Imperial College School of Medicine, London.........................................14Keele University, School of Medicine......................................................15King's College London School of Medicine.............................................15University of Leeds, School of Medicine .................................................16University of Leicester, Leicester Medical School...................................16University of Liverpool, Faculty of Medicine............................................16London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine..................................17University of Manchester, Faculty of Medical and Human Sciences.......17University of Newcastle, The Medical School .........................................17The University of Nottingham, Faculty of Medicine.................................18University of Oxford ................................................................................19Peninsula Medical School.......................................................................20Queen's University Belfast, Faculty of Medicine .....................................20University of Sheffield, School of Medicine.............................................21University of Southampton, School of Medicine......................................21University of St Andrews, Faculty of Medical Sciences ..........................22St George's, University of London ..........................................................22Swansea University, School of Medicine ................................................22University College London, University College Medical School ..............23University of Warwick , Warwick Medical School....................................23Appendix I – UKCAT Countries ..............................................................24Appendix II - Bibliography.......................................................................25
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 2
Introduction
The UK Clinical Aptitude Test (UKCAT) is an entrance test used as part of the
admissions process by a consortium of UK Medical and Dental schools and was
introduced in 2006.
The consortium membership currently comprises 9 (of 14) dental schools in the UK
and 26 (of 31) medical schools.
The Test
The test consists of 5 sections: verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, abstract
reasoning, decision analysis and the recently introduced section, non-cognitive
analysis. The test is delivered online, at a range of test centres throughout the UK
and in 65 countries worldwide (see Appendix I).
The non-cognitive section (Section 5) of the test was designed to identify additional
attributes and characteristics that contribute to success in either medicine or dentistry
careers; robustness, empathy and integrity. The result of this section is given to
candidates as a brief summary in the form of a descriptive paragraph.
The result of the non-cognitive section will not be used in the actual selection process
as at the moment there is insufficient evidence to support a relationship between the
test results and success or failure as a medical/dental student. To ensure that this is
the case Universities will not be able to access the results of this section until after
the selection cycle is completed.
The UKCAT does not contain any curricular content and is designed to be a test of
innate aptitude. The driving force behind it is a desire to ensure that candidates from
all educational backgrounds are provided with a level playing field.
Each section of the UKCAT is separately scaled and reported to candidates and
schools. In addition, a total scaled score, based on the sum of the four section scaled
scores is provided to schools.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 3
The test is organic in that new questions under development are tested by inclusion
in the ongoing tests, however questions that are being tested are not included in the
scoring. Each year all the questions and answers provided by candidates are
analysed and adjustments are made where any question is found to produce skewed
results – in previous years there have been adjustments both up and down when
scoring - most commonly in the Abstract Reasoning and Quantitative Reasoning
sections. Candidates who are affected are notified of their new scores by email and
by letter and the relevant universities are also notified.
The entire test will take 2 hours. Each section will be timed separately. A breakdown
of the timing for each section is given below:
Duration Information Test Items
VERBAL
REASONING
22 minutes 11 passages
4 questions about
each passage
44
QUANTITATIVE
REASONING
23 minutes 9
tables/charts/graphs
4 questions about
each
36
ABSTRACT
REASONING
16 minutes 13 sets of Shapes
5 test shapes
associated with each
set.
65
DECISION
ANALYSIS
32 minutes 1 set of information 28
NON COGNITIVE
ANALYSIS
27 minutes Various
TOTAL 120 minutes 175
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 4
Candidates required to sit the UKCAT.
All applicants to a UKCAT Consortium Medical or Dental School are required to sit
the UKCAT. Where a university uses the UKCAT and a candidate does not hold a
valid exemption, applications without a UKCAT score will usually be rejected.
If you live AND are educated in a country not listed in the UKCAT country index (see
Appendix I) then you do not have to take UKCAT. Your application will be assessed
by the medical or dental school without a test score and it will not affect your
application in any way.
If you believe that you meet the requirements for exemption from UKCAT, you must
contact the UKCAT Administrators for permission to be exempted; you can do this by
email at [email protected]. If you are granted an exemption from UKCAT then
you will be sent a unique exemption number. All requests for exemption from UKCAT
this year must reach the UKCAT Administrators by 27th September 2010. Any
applications received after this date will not be considered.
Registration, Booking and Fees
Registration for the UKCAT is only available online, via the website www.ukcat.ac.uk
Registration this year opens on the 4th May 2010 and closes on the 27th September
2010.
Testing slots can be booked for dates between 4th July 2010 and 8th October 2010
(please note that the deadline to register for the UKCAT is before the UCAS
application deadline.)
It is advisable to book an early test slot as testing slots towards the end of the testing
period attract a higher test fee.
Some of the questions on the online registration form will inquire about your social
background i.e. the occupation of your parents, your ethnicity and nationality. This
information cannot be used by the medical schools in the selection process and they
will not be able to access it.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 5
When registering on the UKCAT website please ensure you enter your full name as it
appears on your birth certificate and/or passport. You should also do this when
completing your UCAS application so that matching your test results to your UCAS
application can be done correctly.
After registering an account, you will be sent further instructions on booking an actual
test date via the Pearson VUE website.
The test fee will need to be paid at the time you book a test slot. The payment card
you use to pay for your test online will need to have the same billing address as the
address you give in the registration page.
The cost of the test varies by the region in which you sit your test and the date:
Prices are shown below.
EU candidate before August 31st: £60
EU candidate after September 1st: £75
Candidate outside EU at any time: £95
UKCAT provide bursaries under which the test fee is waived for cases of hardship.
Candidates will need to apply online for a bursary before registering for the UKCAT.
To be eligible for a UKCAT bursary, candidates must either be in receipt of Education
Maintenance Allowance at the top rate or be personally in receipt of income support /
Employment Support Allowance. Evidence in the form of a letter from the UK Job
Centre Plus, the DfES-appointed awarding body for Education Maintenance
Allowance or the equivalent government agency in another EU country will need to
be provided. If your bursary application is accepted you will be sent a voucher
number by email. This email will constitute your bursary voucher.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 6
Special Arrangements
If you need additional time to sit the test or you need a particular test-centre
environment, for example due to mobility restrictions, you can notify UKCAT of this
using an online form which can be accessed http://www.pearsonvue.com/ukcat/form/
You will be required to provide appropriate clinical evidence.
Standard additional time arrangements for students with dyslexia, dyspraxia,
dysgraphia, dysorthographia, or working memory deficit can also be arranged as part
of the online registration system. When you book a test slot, the system will offer the
option of extended test timing when you book a test slot. In these circumstances you
do not need to supply the UKCAT Administrator or Pearson VUE with evidence of
your medical condition. However, the UKCAT-participating universities, to which you
apply, will ask you to send the clinical evidence to them later in the admissions cycle.
Your UKCAT result may be declared void if you do not present adequate supporting
evidence when it is asked for by one of the universities.
Preparation
The test is designed as an aptitude test and the official position of both the UKCAT
consortium and of Pearson VUE who administer the test is that it cannot be revised.
It is essential therefore to use the familiarisation questions on the UKCAT website at
http://www.ukcat.ac.uk/ to ensure that you are aware of the format of the questions
and the timescales involved.
Although there may be a threshold beyond which it is not possible to improve your
score on an aptitude test, practice and strategy are very important factors in ensuring
that the score you achieve on the day is a true reflection of the full extent of your
ability.
Understanding the scoring system and question formats will help you to maximise the
efficiency with which you collect marks – as these tests are not negatively marked it
is important to develop an understanding of the time allowed for each question so
that you pace yourself correctly, ensuring that you answer as many questions as
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 7
possible – every question you leave blank when you run out of time is a mark you
definitely didn’t get.
Anecdotal evidence suggests that practicing questions produces a marked
improvement. There are a range of practice materials available – books and online
sources and different methods will suit different people but there is a definite
argument in favour of practicing on a computer to mimic the experience of sitting the
UKCAT which is itself administered electronically.
Results
At the test centre you will receive a printed copy of your results immediately after
completing the test.
Pearson VUE will make your UKCAT result available only to the UKCAT
Consortium universities to whom you apply through the UCAS process.
You may only sit the UKCAT once each year. If you try to sit it twice in the same test
cycle, the later sitting will be automatically invalidated and the later result will be void.
Your result is only valid for one year and if you subsequently reapply to read
Medicine or Dentistry you would need to re-sit the UKCAT in that admissions year.
Allowance for unusual circumstances
If you did not notify UKCAT about any special arrangements that were needed so
that provision was not made for these or if you sat the test in adverse circumstances
such as at a time of illness or distress any allowance in the interpretation of your
UKCAT result is at the discretion of the University to which you have applied, the
UKCAT Consortium or by Pearson VUE will not make any adjustments to your
scores.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 8
How the results are used for admissions
How the UKCAT-participating universities use the results varies from university to
university and a full breakdown of this is provided in the next section.
Where a university operates a policy that includes a cut-off score for the UKCAT it is
important to note that this will vary from year to year as it will depend on the
applicants and UKCAT scores specific to that admissions cycle. Universities will not
be able to access any scores until the testing period is over for that year and the
UCAS submission deadline has passed. Any cut-off scores will be agreed at this
point.
There are a number of sources that will claim to know a cut-off score for the current
admissions cycle. It is important to note that not only is this information is very
unlikely to ever be released outside of a university’s admissions selection committee;
but anyone claiming to know the cut-off scores before the UCAS deadline has
passed is claiming to know the scores before the universities have set them.
It may be possible to estimate a range for a particular university based on information
from previous cycles but this should be done with caution. Each round of admissions
is self contained and applicants are only competing against other applicants in the
same cycle, so cut-off scores from previous cycles have no bearing on future cycles.
It is possible for cut-off scores to go down as well as up and there is no real way to
predict the direction of movement.
The following section provides a breakdown arranged alphabetically by university
and all the information has been collated from the official University websites or from
published admissions policies. A full list of sources used appears in Appendix II.
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 9
University of Aberdeen, School of MedicineUKCAT Consortium Member: YES
UCAS Course Codes for UKCAT: A100, A201
What they say about the UKCAT:
“Candidates' UKCAT scores are considered in our selection for interview but are not
the sole indicator for selection. In particular they are balanced against actual and
predicted academic achievement. All indicators are considered together in deciding
who will be selected for interview. Those invited to interview offer a broad range of
UKCAT scores. For 2008 entry, the lowest average score for an applicant invited to
interview was 513 and the highest 776.
UCAS applications that offer suitable academic standards of qualifications are
processed in four stages. Firstly, an academic score is given for attained or predicted
qualifications. Secondly, the UCAS personal statement and reference are carefully
evaluated and objectively scored. The third score is then given for attainment in the
UKCAT. A summary of these scores determines which candidates are then selected
for interview. Interviews take place between October and March and achieve the
fourth objective score. Some overseas applicants are interviewed overseas.
Ultimately, offers will be made to candidates who achieve an overall score that is
greater than the designated threshold. ”
Barts and The London School of Medicine and DentistryUKCAT Consortium Member: YES
UCAS Course Codes for UKCAT: A100, A101, A200, A201
What they say about the UKCAT:
“We will use the UKCAT mean score, in conjunction with the academic achievements
to indicate which candidates to interview. Each year, based on the number of people
whom we plan to invite to interview, after ranking the applicants for each programme
we determine a UKCAT cut-off score for that programme. Those who have achieved
the top UKCAT scores and who have met the academic entry requirements will be
invited to attend an interview. These UKCAT cut-off scores are determined by the
performance of applicants each year and there is no predetermined cut-off score for
the UKCAT at which people will be interviewed. ”
© Emedica / UKCATPrep.com 2010 10
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