11Aug

Preparing for the AMC Clinical Exam While Working or Parenting — It Is Possible

Let me start by saying this — I’ve been where you are.

I sat the AMC exams years after graduating, with kids to raise, work to show up for, and zero time to waste. If you’re preparing for the AMC clinical exam (AMC OSCE) while working or parenting, it can feel like a mountain. But I promise you, with the right approach, it is possible.

1. How did I Make It Work (Most Days)

Every morning, I woke up at 4:30 a.m. Not because I’m superhuman, but because it’s the only quiet time I get. I studied till 6:30, made school lunches, packed mine and my partner’s lunch and headed to work.

On the drive, I verbalised physical exam stations aloud — like  shoulder, murmur, and neuro exams as if I had a patient in the passenger seat. On the way home, I was often tired and I listened to AMC-relevant podcasts to keep the momentum going.

Here are a few high-yield Australian podcasts I recommend for AMC OSCE-style preparation:
• RACGP Podcast – https://www.racgp.org.au/education/podcasts

And let me say this clearly: verbalisation is essential.

You need to hear your own words to:
– Train your brain to speak in structured clinical language
– Practice clarity under pressure
– Spot filler words, hesitations, and rushed explanations

There’s a reason why people rehearse speeches aloud — it improves fluency, confidence, and retention. The same principle applies to OSCEs. Reading in your head is not enough. You have to say it out loud.

2. You’re Not Lazy. You’re Overloaded.

I see so many IMG doctors juggling full-time jobs or young children and feeling guilty about not doing “enough.” Let’s get something straight: you’re not lazy — you’re managing more than most.

You don’t need 8-hour study marathons. You need 30–60 minute focused bursts, targeting:
– AMC OSCE high-yield cases
– Structured communication
– Role plays with feedback

3. Turn Ordinary Moments Into Study Wins

  • Waiting for a meeting? Revise consultation domains.
    • Folding laundry? Listen to a GP podcast.
    • Long commute? Do recalls in your head.
    • Shower time? Practice closing the consultation with empathy.This is how you study while living real life.

4. Structure Over Stress

You don’t need more hours — you need a smarter plan. Use:
– Timed OSCE drills (8 min max)
– Self-recordings (yes, cringe-worthy but helpful)
– A small accountability study group
– Case recalls to guide your prep

Examples of high-yield AMC clinical exam cases you must master:
– Tiredness
– PV bleeding
– Snoring in a child
– Mania
– E-cigarette counseling

5. You’re Already Doing the Hard Part

Working, parenting, and still chasing your dream — that takes grit. If I could pass the AMC OSCE while juggling all of this, so can you.

You are not alone in this.

If you need a structured push, join us at Oyamed. We offer:
– One-on-one coaching
– Mock AMC OSCEs
– Study support that fits around your life

You’ve Got This. One Station at a Time.

Even if your prep isn’t perfect, you’re showing up. And sometimes, that’s more than enough.

Reach out if you’re ready to study smarter, not harder.

05Jul

How to do Role-Play for AMC Clinical Exam OSCE Scenarios at Home — Even Without a Partner

Preparing for the AMC Clinical exam OSCE can feel lonely at times — especially if you don’t have a study partner or can’t always attend group sessions. But here’s some good news: you can practise effectively on your own. In fact, many of my students start this way before they ever role-play with a real person.

Here are a few realistic strategies you can try today — plus my simple “float and dive” method that helps you cover a scenario properly, even when you’re talking to an empty room.

  1. Start with the Basics — Out Loud

Reading notes won’t prepare you for the OSCE. You have to get comfortable speaking out loud. Pick any common scenario — for example, a young woman with abdominal pain. Stand in front of a mirror, or sit at your desk, and talk through:

Your introduction

Your open questions

Specific red flags and risk factors

Explanation and counselling

It feels awkward at first. That’s normal. You’re training your mouth and brain to work together under pressure.

 

  1. Use the “Float and Dive” Method

Most candidates get stuck because they drill down too soon or not at all. My method is simple:

Float: Start wide — gather big-picture information. What’s the main problem? How long? Any warning signs?

Dive: Once you hear a clue (like sudden severe pain, or a sexual history), go deeper into that line.

Then, float back up — check you didn’t miss the rest of the history. It’s like scanning the ocean: swim around, then dive when you see something interesting.

 

  1. Play Both Roles

If you’re alone, switch chairs (literally!). Sit as the patient and answer your own questions out loud. Many of my students find this makes them think like an examiner: Did I ask the right thing? Did that question make sense?

 

  1. Record and Reflect

Use your phone. Record a full 8-minute scenario, then play it back. Notice:

Are you speaking too fast or too slow?

Did you miss key questions?

How was your explanation at the end?

Most people hate listening to themselves — do it anyway. It’s one of the best self-correction tools you have.

 

  1. Bring in Friends or Family (Optional)

No willing partner? No problem. But if you have kids, a spouse, or a housemate, get them to read a patient brief to you. You’d be surprised how much this helps — and they don’t need medical knowledge.

 

Consistency Beats Perfection

At the end of the day, regular short practice beats one big session the night before your exam. Even 10–15 minutes a day is enough. The goal is to train your thinking pattern, your mouth, and your nerves — so when you face the real examiner, it feels like just another scenario.

Need a push?

At Oyamed, we run small group role-plays and realistic mocks every week. If you’re ready to pass, come join us — you’ll never have to prepare alone again.

“Remember: you don’t pass because you know everything. You pass because you practised enough to stay calm when it counts.”

You’ve got this.

05Jun

Why You Can’t Wing It for the AMC OSCE

In medical school, most of us have, at some point, played the numbers game. You study hard, sure—but maybe not everything. There’s that unspoken rule: if you’ve covered 70–80% of the syllabus well enough, you’ll scrape through the finals. We knew the examiners weren’t out to fail us; they wanted to see if we were safe enough to progress. So, there was a bit of wiggle room. We took our chances.

But the AMC OSCE? That’s a whole different beast.

This exam doesn’t care if you’re almost there. It’s designed to test whether you can actually perform in a high-stakes, real-world clinical setting. The Australian Medical Council is clear about its mandate: they want safe, competent, and job-ready doctors. There’s no sympathy for gaps in your knowledge or half-baked clinical skills.

In fact, more recent research highlights just how unforgiving these exams are. A 2021 review in Medical Education confirmed that OSCEs remain one of the gold-standard methods for assessing clinical competence—and they’re especially effective at identifying candidates who aren’t ready for independent practice (Patrício et al., 2021). Every station is an opportunity to show not just what you know but what you can do—under pressure, in real time, with no room for fluff.

Unlike uni exams, where you might bluff your way through a long answer, the OSCE is brutally fair. You either do the task—whether it’s breaking bad news, managing an acutely unwell patient, or performing a focused physical exam—or you don’t. No amount of smooth talk covers for shaky clinical reasoning or poor communication.

It’s also worth noting that the pass rate for the AMC clinical exam tends to hover around 35–45%—a stark contrast to the friendlier med school pass rates. That alone tells you: this isn’t an exam where you can “chance it.”

So, what’s the takeaway? If you’re prepping for the AMC OSCE, aim for 100%. Cover every case type, practice your stations relentlessly, and seek honest feedback. You don’t want to be the one saying, “I thought I could get away with just…”—because this exam doesn’t do second chances lightly.

Your medical degree got you through uni finals. But for the AMC OSCE? Only full preparation will do.

At Oyamed, we’ve helped hundreds of doctors cross that finish line with tailored one-on-one coaching, realistic mock exams, and feedback that cuts straight to the point. Whether you’re sitting your exam next month or next year, let’s make sure you’re fully ready—no guesswork, no shortcuts.

Get in touch today to find out how we can work together to get you over the line.