How GCSprep works
A paced, phased approach for busy clinicians: study first, test mid-way, push through an endurance exam, then walk in on test day with a focused cheat sheet in hand.
Anchored by the 12-week study guide
A week-by-week plan that sequences study, mid-program tests, and the endurance exam — so you always know what to do next.
- Phase 1
Study first — build the foundation
Begin in study mode with focused 10-question quizzes by category. Every answer comes with a clinical reasoning explanation, so you're not just memorizing — you're learning to think like the exam. Confirm what you know, expose what you don't, and follow the 12-week study guide so the work is paced, not panicked.
- Phase 2
Test mid-way — pressure-check your progress
Once the foundation is in place, switch to 50-question timed tests. These mid-program exams stress-test the categories you've been studying, surface lingering weak spots, and start training the time-pressure stamina the real GCS demands.
- Phase 3
Endurance exam — rehearse the real thing
Right before test day, the 200-question endurance exam mirrors the actual GCS in length, pacing, and difficulty. Strict integrity rules — no tab switching, refreshing, or resizing — make the simulation count, so test day feels familiar, not foreign.
- Test day
Day-of cheat sheet — last-minute review
On exam morning, the day-of cheat sheet gives you a high-yield, at-a-glance review of the concepts most likely to show up. No new material — just the reminders that calm nerves and lock in recall when it matters most.
Why this sequence works
- Study mode builds clinical reasoning before testing — not the other way around.
- The 12-week guide sequences review, mid-program tests, and the endurance exam so nothing is left to chance.
- Mid-program 50-question tests catch weak spots while there's still time to fix them.
- The 200-question endurance exam trains stamina, so test-day fatigue isn't a surprise.
- The day-of cheat sheet anchors recall on exam morning — high-yield, no clutter.