| Human Gross Anatomy is a rite of passage. It is a “weed out” course, taught at the beginning of medical school, physical and occupational therapy school, and physician assistant school to determine if you have what it takes to handle the workload, psychological pressure, and intellectual rigor of working in the health professions.
All the tools you need to rock the hardest course you’ll ever take.
My book, Surviving Gross Anatomy, will save you a lot of time, a lot of money, and a LOT of stress. I have interviewed medical students, physician assistants, and physical and occupational therapy students about their experiences taking Human Gross Anatomy, and I wrote the book I wish I’d had before I took the course.
I have included every trick they taught me, every bit of study advice, every wardrobe
recommendation.
I will tell you:
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Why you should add blue-green nail polish and a super plus tampon with applicator to your dissection kit. |
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How to keep your cadaver from getting totally disgusting (these tips alone are worth the price of the book, for real.) |
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Three steps you can take if you can’t stand the smell |
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One 36.95 book that your professors won’t tell you to buy that will give you a HUGE edge on written exams |
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One $95 book that your professors will tell you buy that you definitely don’t need
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Where to get cheap scrubs that you can throw away after the course (not your campus bookstore) |
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The “little scuba diver” trick – a study tip that will save you hours of memorization |
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One task that you can perform that might save you a TON of time in the smelly lab (yes, might – it doesn’t work for everyone. Only 60% of us.) |
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What you shouldn’t pack for lunch while you’re taking the course |
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And…what it’s REALLY like to dissect a human cadaver. |
In most cases, if you don’t pass Gross, you have to drop out of school. But some students will return the following year to try again, and succeed. One student in my class failed his first attempt, and then got the highest grades on every written exam the next year, when he tried a second time. He succeeded like this because he had already seen how the course worked – he knew how to study, what and who to pay attention to, and how not to waste his time and energy. He’s one of the many students I interviewed to write this book, and I incorporated all of his advice into the book, so that you can benefit from it too.
Oh, and in case you’re wondering – I did take Human Gross Anatomy myself, and I got an A. I have tutored fellow students through the course, and helped them get As too. I’ve put everything I know about doing well in Human Gross Anatomy into this book. I really hope it’s useful to you. If it’s not, send it back within 90 days, and I’ll give you your money back.
And if you fail Human Gross Anatomy after reading my book,
even after the 90 days have passed, I will give you your money back. |
| If you buy this e-book, you will also get: |
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The Amazing Surviving Gross Anatomy Mnemonics Compendium. A giant book full of anatomy and physiology mnemonics – learning the brachial plexus has never been so easy! |
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The Surviving Gross Anatomy Resource Booklet. A companion to Surviving Gross Anatomy. This booklet will give you access to learning style inventories, discounted scrubs and dissection kits, and information on textbooks that will save you hundreds of dollars. If you buy scrubs, textbooks and dissection kits at your college bookstore, you are going to get taken for a ride. This resource guide alone will save you at least $98. |
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A sincere thank-you note. Proceeds from this e-book are helping pay off my rather weighty student loans. |
| 10% of the profits from the sale of this e-book go to: The Common Ground Health Clinic, Algiers, New Orleans, Louisiana – providing free health care for the people of New Orleans.
Doctors Without Borders – An international independent medical humanitarian organization that delivers emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural and man-made disasters, and exclusion from health care. |
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