Physical Address

115 W Rainey Ave
Weatherford, OK 73096

How To Review Cars Section Mcat

How To Review Cars Section Mcat

The CARS section of the MCAT uses three main question types:

6 Steps to Conquering MCAT CARS

There are many myths about the Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS) section, one of which is that your score depends on luck. If you happen to get “good” passages, all is well, but if you don’t, you are in trouble. Thankfully, this is entirely untrue. It’s practice not luck that will help you conquer the MCAT CARS section. To do well on this section you will need to fundamentally change how you read the passages and go about answering the questions.

MCAT microscope icon

Check out our online MCAT CARS prep courses or keep reading to discover an effective MCAT CARS strategy that will help you improve your CARS score.

Step 1: Tackle passages out of order

  • Do Now (an easier passage)
  • Do Later (a harder passage)
  • Killer (one that you will randomly guess on or do last)

Skim a few sentences of the passage and see if you can easily paraphrase it. If you can, it’s most likely an easier passage to understand.

Step 2: Read the questions first

Step 3: Read with a highlighter and scratch paper

As you read through the passage, use the highlighting function (sparingly) to annotate the most important references in the text. This would include things like:

Med school admission committees tend to weigh the CARS section heavily, so it’s important to get your best score.

  • question topics
  • topic sentences
  • shifts in direction or continuations
  • the author’s tone
  • different points of view
  • conclusions

Use your scratch paper, especially on difficult passages, to jot down the main point of each chunk of information. Think about how these chunks relate to each other. Track the logical structure of the author’s argument.

How to Review MCAT CARS and Improve Your Score

Learn how top scorers review CARS practice questions

how-to-review-mcat-cars.png

Table of Contents

Part 1: Introduction

Part 2: CARS Question Types

Part 3: CARS Answer Choice Types

Part 4: CARS Sample Passages

Part 5: Structuring a CARS Review Sheet

Part 1: Introduction

As you begin studying for the Critical Analysis and Reasoning (CARS) section of the MCAT, you may be wondering how in the world you’re going to approach it. Isn’t it just something that some people are just good at and some aren’t? After all, there’s no real content to review like the other three sections, which makes CARS a much more difficult section to study for.

In addition, CARS can be trickier than critical reading sections that you may have encountered on tests like the SAT or ACT because CARS takes passages a step further than comprehension. Instead of comprehension, you’ll be asked to pick between multiple answers that could be true but only one answer choice that is correct. CARS is a big reason why the MCAT is a hard test, and you’ll need to use high-yield CARS MCAT strategies to perform well.

RECOMMENDED:  Mcat Length

Many students hit the feared “score plateau” on CARS sometime in their prep. It seems that no matter what they do, they can’t seem to increase their CARS score and break out of the plateau. So, what can you do to continue improving?

The key is to work smarter and not harder by learning how to review CARS passages after you take them. In this guide, we’ll outline the types of questions and answers that CARS likes to ask, provide detailed examples of how to answer sample passages, and show you how to create a review sheet that will help maximize your score.

After reading through this guide, you’ll be well on your way to achieving an MCAT score that can get you into medical school!

Part 2: CARS Question Types

The CARS section of the MCAT uses three main question types:

1. Foundations of Comprehension

2. Reasoning Within the Text

3. Reasoning Beyond the Text

Each type of question comes with its own challenges, but you can still take solace in one fact that is always true: no matter the difficulty of a question, the correct answer will always be supported by text within the passage! Now, let’s go through the three types in a little bit more detail.

Foundations of Comprehension

Questions within the “Foundations of Comprehension” category will test if you have a fundamental understanding of the meaning of the passage. This means the MCAT will ask you detail-oriented questions. These types of questions typically have question stems like “According to the passage” or “All of the following are true except…”.

The next type of question under the “Foundations of Comprehension” category will test you about the function of a part of the passage. For example, the question might ask you, “Why did the author include ____?” These types of questions test if you can follow the logic of the passage.

The third and final type of question in this category asks for the main idea of the passage. Simply put, these questions test whether you understand the purpose of the passage as a whole.

Reasoning Within the Text

“Reasoning Within the Text” questions ask you to synthesize multiple parts of the text in order to develop a reasonable conclusion. These questions primarily include inference questions and use words or phrases like “imply”, “suggest”, and “most likely to be true”.

RECOMMENDED:  John Hopkins Medical School Acceptance Rate

Imply questions are a common place that we see students get tripped up on the MCAT CARS section. The test writers want you to make an inference that makes sense but is not correct or supported by the passage. Be wary of these types of wrong answer choices!

Reasoning Beyond the Text

Finally, questions within the “Reasoning Beyond the Text” category require you take the passage information and extrapolate to a broader meaning or apply the information to a different context. These questions bring in new information and ask what the author would say about it given the passage or provide different answer choices and ask which most closely resembles information from the passage. One common CARS “Reasoning Beyond the Text” question gives four options and asks which one would most likely strengthen or weaken the author’s main argument.

Other CARS Question Types

There are two other common types of questions to give special consideration. The first is “negative” questions that include not or least. (Note: This is where reading too fast can cause you to miss easy points on the exam!) Many questions will say, for example, “Which of these is least likely…” If you are rushing too quickly, you may lose sight of the “negative” and pick an incorrect answer. This can happen even if you understood the passage well, and there’s nothing more frustrating than leaving points on the table. Look out for these types of questions and eliminate all of the true answers before selecting the “correct” one.

The second type of question to pay special attention to is the Roman numeral question. On these questions, you’ll receive three options (I, II, and III), and then the answer options (A-D) will give different combinations of the numerals, such as “I and III” or “II only”. These questions are more difficult because you could know that option I is correct and option II is wrong. However, if you’re unsure about option III, you may still get the question incorrect.

The first strategy to handle these questions is to start with the number (I, II, or III) that you are most sure about and eliminate the answer choices that do not include that number. Another strategy is to check if two options contradict and eliminate answer choices that include the contradicting options. Finally, it is important to note that all three roman numerals could be correct, so don’t discount “I, II, and III” as an option if it’s presented!

Maddie Otto
Maddie Otto

Maddie is a second-year medical student at the University of Notre Dame in Sydney and one of Level Medicine’s workshop project managers. Prior to studying medicine, she worked and studied as a musician in Melbourne. She has a background in community arts, which combined her love for both the arts and disability support. She is an advocate for intersectional gender equity, and is passionate about accessibility and inclusive practice within the healthcare system.

Articles: 1166