Graduate Medical School Admissions Test
The Graduate Medical School Admissions Test is a test used to select candidates applying to study medicine, dentistry, optometry, pharmacy and veterinary science at Australian, British, and Irish universities for admission to their Graduate Entry Programmes. Candidates may take the test in a test centre in one of the 6 countries, being Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States, offering the test.
GAMSAT makes use of a marking system known as item response theory, meaning that scores are issued according to a sigmoid distribution and can be converted to a percentile rank based on the percentile curve that is issued at the same time as results are released. Candidates are not informed of their raw mark and, in any case, this bears little resemblance to their final score.
Sitting the GAMSAT is a separate process to applying to study medicine. Most universities with graduate-entry medical programs require:
- Completion of any bachelor's degree
- Obtaining a prerequisite GAMSAT cut-off score
- Achieving prerequisite marks in the bachelor's degree
History
GAMSAT was originally produced in 1995 by four Australian medical schools as a tool to select for candidates applying to study medicine. Since then, its use in Australia has expanded to eleven graduate-entry medicine courses:- Australian National University
- Deakin University
- Flinders University
- Griffith University
- Macquarie University
- The University of Melbourne
- The University of Notre Dame Australia
- The University of Notre Dame Australia
- The University of Queensland
- The University of Sydney
- The University of Western Australia
- The University of Wollongong
- Cardiff University
- Keele University
- University of Liverpool
- Scottish Graduate Entry Medicine Programme
- St Georges, University of London
- Swansea University
- University of Nottingham
- Ulster University
- University of Exeter
- University of Plymouth
Apart from these, Oceania University of Medicine, Jagiellonian University of Medicine and Poznan University of Medical Sciences also accept GAMSAT scores.
Usage
GAMSAT is a reasoning rather than knowledge-based test. It is not to be confused with the unrelated UCAT. UCAT is used for applicants to traditional undergraduate-entry medical schools, and is open to high school leavers.Format
GAMSAT is held twice a year: in late March / early April in Ireland and Australia, and around the middle/end of September in the UK and Australia albeit with fewer available venues. It is administered by the Australian Council for Educational Research and requires timely registration, usually by late January for Ireland and Australia or August for the UK.There is no prescribed synopsis of the test, but it does require the following levels of knowledge
- Biology and Chemistry - 1st year university level
- Physics - Australian Year 12 level
- English - HSC Standard English level
There are three sections that comprise the GAMSAT
- Section I comprises 62 questions in 100 minutes from the Humanities and Social Sciences
- Section II - 2 essays assessing written communication
- Section III - 75 physical science questions in 150 minutes after 1-hour lunch
Attendance
According to ACER, "quite a few thousand" attend the GAMSAT annually worldwide but official figures have not been released. Unofficially however, it is reported that approximately 10,000 candidates attended the 2010 exam.Eligibility for GAMSAT
GAMSAT is available to any person who has completed a Bachelor or an undergraduate honours degree, or who will be in the penultimate or final year of study, at the time of sitting the test, or, in the case of applicants to University of Exeter Medical School and Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine & Dentistry, who believes he/she has achieved an appropriate level of intellectual maturity and subject knowledge to meet the demands of the test.To sit GAMSAT you must be a bona fide prospective applicant to a course for which GAMSAT is a prerequisite.
There is no limit to the number of times a bona fide candidate may sit GAMSAT.