Kaplan Medical: Books
If you have 6 months until Step 1 and love reading, pair a Kaplan chapter with the corresponding section in First Aid. Read Kaplan for context, then annotate your First Aid with the "pearls."
Many students make the mistake of reading First Aid for Step 1 without knowing any clinical context. Kaplan serves as a bridge. Read the Kaplan physiology chapter before you hit the high-yield summary in First Aid. The Bad: The Changing Landscape of Med Ed 1. They are a Time Sink. This is the biggest complaint. Kaplan books are dense. In the current pass/fail Step 1 environment, spending three weeks reading the Kaplan biochemistry book (700+ pages) is arguably a poor return on investment. You could do 2,000 UWorld questions in that time. kaplan medical books
If you are an IMG whose basic sciences feel rusty, the Kaplan series is arguably the best "self-teaching" curriculum on the market. It is more structured than random YouTube videos. The Verdict: To Buy or Not to Buy? Buy them if: You learn by reading dense text, you need to rebuild a weak foundation, or you are an IMG preparing for the Step 1 transition. If you have 6 months until Step 1
Kaplan makes great books, but their real strength is their question bank . A common mistake is buying the books and skipping the online Q-bank. Do not do this. The books are supplemental; the questions are essential. Read the Kaplan physiology chapter before you hit
Kaplan’s anatomy and neuroanatomy books are particularly strong. Their limbic system diagrams and cross-sectional anatomy plates are often clearer than what you get in your standard textbook.