13Nov

Why Many Doctors Fail the AMC Clinical Exam the Second Time — How to Avoid the Trap

Failing the AMC Clinical exam

I often meet doctors who come to me after failing the AMC Clinical exam the first time. They’ve worked hard, spent months preparing, and walked out thinking they’d done better. So when the result says “Fail,” it hits hard. And when they prepare again, they promise themselves: This time, I’ll fix everything. But here’s the truth very few people talk about — a lot of doctors fail their second attempt too. Not because they’re less capable, but because they unknowingly fall into mental and behavioural traps that sabotage their performance.

Let’s unpack why that happens — and how you can make sure it doesn’t happen to you when Failing the AMC Clinical exam.

1.The Emotional Weight of the Second Attempt

The first attempt carries nervous excitement. You’re new to it all — hopeful, focused, and open to feedback.But the second time around, it feels heavier. You’ve got disappointment sitting on your shoulders, maybe guilt, maybe pressure from family or friends. You walk into every station thinking, I can’t afford to fail again. That thought alone is enough to cloud your mind. You stop being present. You start analysing yourself mid-station. You’re not connecting with your patient anymore — you’re trying to prove a point.

And that’s when the real doctor inside you disappears.

The first attempt tests your knowledge. The second attempt tests your mindset.

‘Oyamed Pearl’
Before you dive into studying again, pause. Take time to process what happened. Don’t rush straight into “fixing.”
You can’t rebuild your performance if you’re still carrying shame or fear from last time. Emotional reset comes before intellectual improvement.

2.The Over-Correction Trap

This is probably the biggest reason people fail the second time.

After a fail, you analyse every bit of feedback, ask friends who passed what they did, and try to “correct” yourself.

Someone told you, “You didn’t show enough empathy” — so now you overdo empathy in every single case.
Someone else said, “You were too quiet” — so now you sound loud and unnatural.
You watched a candidate who passed confidently jump straight into management, so now you rush your own stations trying to imitate them.

And in the process, you stop sounding like yourself.

What most people forget is this:
You are not scored against other candidates. You are scored against a checklist.

The assessors don’t compare you to the person before you or the one after you. They simply look at whether you covered the essential tasks safely, respectfully, and effectively.

So mimicking someone else’s style won’t help — in fact, it often hurts you. What worked for them may not match your natural communication style at all.

At Oyamed, I’ve seen so many good doctors fall into this trap of over-correction. They’re trying so hard to fix their weaknesses that they lose their strengths.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Don’t rebuild yourself from scratch. Refine what’s already good. Take feedback, yes — but interpret it with guidance. You don’t need to become someone else to pass. You just need to become a calmer, clearer version of yourself.

 3. Familiarity Leads to Carelessness

The first time you sat the exam, everything felt new. You read every word of the stem carefully. You thought through each question.

The second time, you feel like you’ve seen it all before. You hear “chest pain” and think, Ah, ACS station — I know this one.

But AMC stations are clever. They’re designed to test whether you’re listening — not memorising patterns.

So when you assume you know what’s coming, you miss the twist. Maybe the “chest pain” isn’t cardiac — it’s anxiety. Maybe the “shoulder pain” has a red flag you missed because you rushed.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Treat every station like it’s brand new. Read the stem twice. Ask clarifying questions even if it feels obvious.
The AMC isn’t testing how quickly you can recognise a pattern — it’s testing your clinical judgment and flexibility.

4. Practising for the Wrong Exam

After the first attempt, you remember your stations vividly. You can replay the patients, the questions, the examiner’s face. And so, without realising, you start training for that exam again.

You re-do those same cases over and over, convinced you’re getting better — but what you’re really doing is rehearsing memory, not skill.

Then you walk into the new exam and realise none of those old patterns fit anymore. Panic sets in.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Broaden your practice. Don’t cling to old cases. Practice different variations of similar themes. The goal isn’t to “collect stations” — it’s to sharpen your process: how you think, how you connect, and how you manage time.

5. Bad Habits That Sneak Back In

By the time you’re preparing for a second attempt, you’ve already developed certain habits — good and bad, you always rush to management. keep saying “I’ll reassure the patient” without showing how and missing the patient’s agenda because you’re too focused on your structure.

If you don’t unlearn those, they’ll sink you again.

Practice doesn’t make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.

‘Oyamed Pearl’
Record yourself. Watch your own performance as if you were marking it. You’ll start noticing the small things — your tone, your pacing, your transitions. It’s confronting at first, but it’s the fastest way to grow.

6. Losing the Human Touch

By the second attempt, candidates are often too polished. They’ve memorised perfect phrases and frameworks. But when they speak, it sounds rehearsed — not real.

And that’s where they lose marks.

Because at its core, the AMC Clinical is not just testing your knowledge. It’s testing your ability to be a safe, empathetic, and genuine doctor in Australia.

You might hit every checklist point and still fail if the patient feels unheard.

‘Oyamed pearl’

Focus on connection, not performance. Look at the patient. Acknowledge feelings. Be present in the conversation.
Remember — authenticity is more powerful than perfection.

7. No Strategic Framework

A lot of candidates think they just need to “practice more.” But practice without a framework only reinforces inconsistency.

That’s why I built the PULSE™ Method at Oyamed — a simple, repeatable structure that helps you stay calm, think fast, and connect with your patient under pressure.

It’s not about turning you into a robot. It’s about giving your mind something solid to hold onto when stress hits. A clear structure actually frees you to be more human, because you’re not panicking about what to do next.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Learn one solid, flexible structure that works across all station types — counselling, history, management, ethical scenarios. Then keep practising until it feels natural.

 8. Avoiding Feedback Out of Fear

After failing once, feedback can sting. So many doctors avoid it — they prefer to “just keep practising.”

But practice without feedback is like running on a treadmill. You feel exhausted, but you’re not actually moving forward.

If you keep practising the same mistakes, you’ll get really good at doing it wrong.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Get feedback from people who will tell you the truth — gently, but clearly. That’s why one-on-one coaching works. A good mentor can see your blind spots and help you make small but powerful changes.

9. The Confidence-Competence Mismatch

Some second-time candidates come in overconfident — “I’ve seen it all, I know what to expect.” Others come in underconfident — “I failed once, maybe I’m not good enough.”

Both extremes hurt performance.

Overconfidence makes you rush and skip steps. Underconfidence makes you freeze and overthink.

The sweet spot is earned confidence — built through structured practice and reflection. You know your weaknesses, you’ve worked on them, and you trust your process.

‘Oyamed Pearl’

Keep a progress tracker. Score your mock stations honestly. Watch how you improve over time. Real progress builds real confidence.

10. Fighting the Exam Instead of Partnering with It

Your first attempt felt like a test.
Your second attempt should feel like a collaboration.

The AMC exam isn’t trying to “catch you out.” It’s checking if you can handle real-world scenarios safely and sensitively.

Once you stop fighting the exam, you start understanding it.

Each station becomes less of a threat and more of a conversation. That’s when your calm, clinical reasoning starts to shine.

 

How to Prepare Differently This Time

If you’re taking the exam again, start fresh — but smarter:

1. Reflect first, study second.
2. Don’t over-correct — refine.
3. Practice variety, not repetition.
4. Get real feedback.
5. Rebuild confidence through clarity.
6. Stay human.

 

Final Thoughts

Failing the AMC Clinical exam once doesn’t define you.
But letting it defeat you might.

Your second attempt is your chance to rise with insight and maturity. The goal isn’t to sound like someone else who passed — it’s to sound like the best version of you.

So when you walk into that exam room next time, don’t think, I must pass.
Think, I’m ready to show who I am — clearly, calmly, and confidently.

Because when you align skill with authenticity, you don’t just pass. You stand out.

Want to rebuild your confidence and strategy for your next AMC attempt?
Message Oyamed on WhatsApp to talk to a real mentor who’s been there and understands your journey.

At Oyamed. We are driven by passion. Powered by Expertise.

04Nov

Understanding the AMC OSCE Scoring and What to Do Next

How the AMC OSCE is Scored

The AMC OSCE is a criterion-referenced exam, meaning you’re judged against a standard of competence — not against other candidates. Each station is scored by an examiner using two parts:

  1. The checklist score – these are the measurable tasks and key steps (for example, history, examination, management, and safety-netting).
  2. The global rating – this is the examiner’s overall impression of your performance: rapport, reasoning, structure, and professionalism.

But your final result isn’t based on a simple total. The AMC applies a statistical method called the Borderline Regression Method (BRM) to determine the pass mark for each station.

The Borderline Regression Method Explained

Here’s how it works in simple terms.

For every station, examiners classify candidates as clear fail, borderline, clear pass, and so on. The “borderline” group sits right in the middle — not outstanding, but not unsafe either.

The AMC then looks at the average checklist scores of this borderline group. That average becomes the pass mark for that particular station.

So the pass mark isn’t fixed. It depends on how the borderline group performed on the day. That’s why two sessions of the same exam can have slightly different overall standards.

Why Remarking Rarely Changes the Outcome

Now that you know how scores are generated, it’s easier to understand why remarking almost never changes results.

Each OSCE station is already:

  • Independently marked by a trained examiner.
  • Moderated statistically to adjust for examiner stringency or leniency.
  • Reviewed through AMC’s internal quality-assurance processes before results are released.

A remark will not re-mark your performance; it only checks whether an administrative or clerical error occurred — such as a score being entered incorrectly or a station missing from your record.

The AMC clearly states that differences in examiner judgment are not grounds for a remark.

So while it’s human to hope that your score might shift by one or two points, history shows that remark requests almost never result in a different outcome.

Why It Hurts So Much to Fail

Most of us were high achievers from the start. We’ve sacrificed weekends, birthdays, and family time to study. So when the result says Fail, it doesn’t just sting — it shakes your confidence and identity.

Many IMGs tell me, “I don’t even know what I did wrong.” They replay stations in their mind over and over, convinced that one forgotten question or one nervous smile cost them their dream.

But the OSCE is not only testing medical knowledge. It’s testing how you perform under pressure, how you communicate, how you think out loud, and how you show empathy. These are deeply human skills — and sometimes, on the day, nerves or structure can make or break the outcome.

And that’s why a remark won’t fix it — but reflection and refinement will.

What to Do Instead of a Remark

Here’s what the doctors who pass on their next attempt usually do differently:

  1. Debrief immediately.

    Write down every station you remember — what went well, what you missed, what felt awkward. This reflection becomes your study map.

  2. Identify recurring patterns.

    Did you consistently struggle with time management? Safety-netting? Building rapport? Spotting patterns helps you target your weak spots.

  3. Get structured feedback.

    Join guided study groups or one-on-one coaching. Sometimes an experienced mentor can see what you can’t.

  4. Rebuild confidence through repetition.

    Practice under timed conditions.

  5. Use recall cases wisely.

    Don’t just memorise answers. Use them to understand how to approach scenarios, structure consultations, and reason clinically.

The key is not to start from scratch — it’s to start with clarity.

The Mindset Shift: From Remark to Remarkable

You didn’t come this far to give up now.

The difference between a remark and a remarkable comeback is mindset.

Every IMG who succeeds has faced failure somewhere. The ones who ultimately pass are those who turn disappointment into determination. They don’t chase one missing mark — they chase mastery.

When you shift your focus from “Why did I fail?” to “What can I learn?”, you take back control. That’s where your power lies.

Your Next Step

If you’re still uncertain, ask yourself this:

Would I rather spend weeks waiting for a remark that’s unlikely to change, or start preparing now to ensure I never have to go through this again?

You already know the answer.

The AMC OSCE is not just an exam — it’s a test of resilience, adaptability, and growth. Passing it means you’ve not only proven your competence but also your ability to rise after falling. Oyamed provides the best AMC clinical preparation Courses.

So take a few days, breathe, and then start again. With the right structure, guidance, and support, you will pass — not by chance, but by design.

“Failure is not the opposite of success. It’s the foundation of it.”

When you’re ready to rebuild, I’m here to help.

👉 Join my next free Zoom session for IMGs, where we unpack real  cases, talk through scoring systems like the Borderline Regression Method, and work on strategies that actually help you pass the AMC OSCE with confidence.

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