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Friday, August 5, 2016

10 Tips on Studying Anatomy

I don't profess to be a good student, let alone a great student. I do try my best and while sometimes the best may be good enough, other times it's not. The important thing is to keep trying. There's no perfect way to do things, what works for one subject might not work for another subject. And what may work for me, might not work for you. So before I start this post, I just want to let you know a couple of essential things

It's okay to not know how to study. The important thing is to not give up heart and to keep trying out new styles.
Don't be harsh on yourself while you're adjusting. Yes, being harsh could get you to work harder, but save that study technique for when you can actually work hard and efficiently.
The study methods I've outlined here will not be the perfect or only way to study anatomy, and it also may or may not work out for you!

Glad we cleared this out! Now here's the big question: how can you study anatomy?


Anatomy is a subject that involves a lot of description. There are descriptions of the locations of organs, their insides, their outsides, their neighbors, their blood supply, their nerve supply, their lymphatics drainage, their supports and maybe even their development as well as their microstructure.

What I noticed about anatomy is that it needs constant revision. There's so much material to remember, it may seem trivial and confusing, but it's all really important. Here are 10 things you should focus on when you're studying anatomy.


1. Skim through the chapter first. Don't start studying from the first sentence, just go through the text and familiarize yourself with what's written. How much of this have you already studied? How much of this makes absolutely no sense? Skimming through the chapter will give you an overview of everything and it'll help keep you focused. If you start studying from the very sentence, you'll just end up tiring yourself out!

2. Always keep an atlas open. It's good to have a picture to help guide you through the long pages of text, whether it's the muscles of the limbs, the organs in the abdomen or the arteries around the heart.

3. When studying about a specific organ, always focus on it's relations. What's behind it? What's in front of it? What's beside it? Check it out on the atlas!

4. Similarly, it's important to know about a structure's blood supply, nerve supply, veinous drainage and lymphatic drainage. 

5. When studying about arterial supply, it can be really helpful to draw out an arterial map, starting from the aorta, all the way to the structures that your are reading about! The same can be done for veins.


6. Always go through the clinical conditions thoroughly. It would be a good idea to write them down in your atlas so you can go through it quickly to remind yourself.

7. In fact, write a bunch of quick facts (after you're done studying everything!) in your atlas next to what you've finished studying. I try to compact as much information as I can on my atlas so that when the time for the test comes, all I need is the pictures and the information scribbled next to it to remember all the important things!

8. Study developmental anatomy with gross anatomy. Sometimes, studying about development can help make things easier, like nerve supply and blood supply!

9. The same can be said for histology! Studying histology will help your understand the organ on a microscopic level and this can also really help you out when it comes to studying physiology too!

10. Go through the chapter over and over, whenever you get time! It's easy to forget what you've studied, but by going through it again and again, you can consolidate it in your memory :)

So here were ten little tips to help you study anatomy :) It's a great subject to study and it's satisfying to know everything, especially if you can see it on yourself, like the muscles in your limbs or the bones in your hands and feet. Have a nice day!

6 comments:

  1. Inshallah I'll be needing this blog next year when Inshallah I get into a MedSchool =)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Every time I see you say something like "I'm not a good student", I'm all like: "You've got to give yourself some more credit!"
    It may sound weird, but I do a lot of these things when I study German, just a little differently. A dictionary instead of an atlas, exemplary sentences instead of quick facts. No matter what you study, this is a helpful post :)

    x Envy
    Lost in Translation

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for this post! I'm actually looking at the aspect of Med School in the future and this post makes med school look more interesting!

    ReplyDelete
  4. You're a med student? Cool! I'm an engineering. I do not know much about med (me hating biology, haha) but I'm sure this post will help a lot of other people look forward more about their future studies in college.
    http://awaveofvellichor.wordpress.com

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  5. This was great! I'm good at remembering things but I'm horrible when it comes to science related stuff. I know the major basics when it comes my body. 😂

    S .x http://ramblingsofayoungprgirl.blogspot.com/

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  6. I'm now a Speech and Language Therapist, but I would have loved to come across these tips 5 years ago when I was studying anatomy! These tips are still relevant to me now though, so thank you! All the best with Med School! x

    www.stephiebeau.com

    ReplyDelete

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