Wow. Before this, I just couldn't understand why I was getting them wrong. It was so hard for me to grasp the concept but now with your techniques, I am feeling confident that I'll ace this on the DAT. Thank you for making these videos, know that they are very helpful.
Really helpful, not just for DAT but other exams similar to this. In my country, all designers take this same test which have the same syllabus as DAT examiners (excluding anything medical related). Thanks SO MUCH!
Amazing explanation! I thought this section was tough, but you explained it in a way to solve all these problems easily. Thank you so much for posting this. Very helpful
@@mentaldental I saw this comment while I was prepping for PAT and my test center gave me two sheets of dry erase paper, one side was blank and the other was graph paper. But the first time I took my DAT I got blank white paper with a pen. It was the same testing center both times. So, its best to call ahead and ask what you will be provided with. Side note: I got a 20 PAT score my first DAT try and a 25 on my most recent try! Also got a 23 in Bio (upgrade from a 15). All thanks to booster!
@@seiftadros5198 I used bootcamp my first try, and I didn't do much in the way of practice problems/exams. The second time I used booster and did all the practice problems provided and the practice exams, there were some of the same questions form the practice on the real thing. Good luck!
I do fine with one or two folds, possibly 3 depending on the type but once the folds become complicated, I have a very hard time trying to configure a 2 dimensional depiction in 3d to make the correct answer.
Do you know where I could find some free PAT practice like CZcams videos or somewhere else? I am waiting on my book currently but the PAT is my worst section.
It comes down to the size of the fold. Look again at the example at 10:22. If you look above "Fold 1" you can directly compare what different size folds look like.
Out of curiosity: Why do they use this type of test-as a "component' of a test-for dentist prerequisite? What is the reason/logic behind it? And as such: Why would this type of test not be required for pre-med/MCAT (general practice; surgeons)
Three-dimensional spatial awareness and manipulation are really important when it comes time for clinical skills as a dentist. Whether preparing a tooth for a cavity or a crown, it does play a role! Why it is not required for medical students I cannot say for sure.
Wow. Before this, I just couldn't understand why I was getting them wrong. It was so hard for me to grasp the concept but now with your techniques, I am feeling confident that I'll ace this on the DAT. Thank you for making these videos, know that they are very helpful.
I’m so glad to hear my videos are helping you out! Give the DAT all you have 💪🏼💯
After doing the DAT Bootcamp course, this brought everything together for me. I really appreciate the line of symmetry explanation. THANK YOU!!!!
Thank you!!! You the only one that actually explains this the right way.
You’re welcome! Glad you liked it! 👍🏼😊
Really helpful, not just for DAT but other exams similar to this. In my country, all designers take this same test which have the same syllabus as DAT examiners (excluding anything medical related). Thanks SO MUCH!
I’m so glad to hear that! Awesome 🙌🏼
this was so helpful. I appreciate your channel!
Thanks for watching, I’m glad it was helpful 😊
these strategies work so well thank you. Can you do the natural science part as well, best way to study.
Amazing explanation! I thought this section was tough, but you explained it in a way to solve all these problems easily. Thank you so much for posting this. Very helpful
You're very welcome! I'm so glad that my explanations helped you!
Thank you for this video. This strategy works very well.
Great to hear!
Thanks fir these videos , they are helping so much
This is incredibly helpful. Thank you!
I’m so glad to hear that! You’re welcome ☺️
You are the GOAT!!
This helped a lot! Thank you
I'm so glad it helped! 😊
Absolutely very helpful video!
By the way many test centers do not provide graph paper anymore so drawing tik-tak-toe squares are the only option
Thanks for the info. Are you talking about Prometric test centers or something else?
@@mentaldental yes, prometric
@@mentaldental I saw this comment while I was prepping for PAT and my test center gave me two sheets of dry erase paper, one side was blank and the other was graph paper. But the first time I took my DAT I got blank white paper with a pen. It was the same testing center both times. So, its best to call ahead and ask what you will be provided with. Side note: I got a 20 PAT score my first DAT try and a 25 on my most recent try! Also got a 23 in Bio (upgrade from a 15). All thanks to booster!
@@juliahlaemmer1001 i am in the porcess of studing. I was wondering, what do you think was the reason you got a 15 the first time ?
@@seiftadros5198 I used bootcamp my first try, and I didn't do much in the way of practice problems/exams. The second time I used booster and did all the practice problems provided and the practice exams, there were some of the same questions form the practice on the real thing. Good luck!
Thank you so much!
You're welcome!
I do fine with one or two folds, possibly 3 depending on the type but once the folds become complicated, I have a very hard time trying to configure a 2 dimensional depiction in 3d to make the correct answer.
Do you know where I could find some free PAT practice like CZcams videos or somewhere else? I am waiting on my book currently but the PAT is my worst section.
Has anyone here used this strategy on the actual DAT? How did you do?
How do you determine if the line of fold is on the line or in between two lines?
-Thanks
It comes down to the size of the fold. Look again at the example at 10:22. If you look above "Fold 1" you can directly compare what different size folds look like.
Out of curiosity: Why do they use this type of test-as a "component' of a test-for dentist prerequisite? What is the reason/logic behind it? And as such: Why would this type of test not be required for pre-med/MCAT (general practice; surgeons)
Three-dimensional spatial awareness and manipulation are really important when it comes time for clinical skills as a dentist. Whether preparing a tooth for a cavity or a crown, it does play a role! Why it is not required for medical students I cannot say for sure.
these kind of questions give me a seizure
What’s the purpose of this ? 🥴