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Dr. Najeeb medical lecture video: The Best Way to Prepare for Medical Exams and Boards.

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Lizi Klein Los Angeles, CaliforniaThis is singularly the best investment I made for the first year of medical school. Each video is a jackpot of information with amazing drawings, great energy, and a phenomenal professor!Kathryn Giroux Whitefish, Ontario Currently, the only things saving my embryology and 1st-trimester ultrasound marks - keep the wealth of education flowing! Highly recommended! Maryam Moradi The University of Texas, AustinI bought lifetime access because I believe there is no better source for learning the foundation of medicine. I strongly recommend him to anyone who cares about true learning and not merely memorizing! Jackson David Reynolds University of North GeorgiaDr. Najeeb Lectures are top notch. Comprehensive medical lectures of the utmost quality across all preclinical (and many clinical) topics. Fantastic for deepening one's understanding for clinical practice and licensing/board examinations.Jacob Joseph Columbus, OhioDr. Najeeb is the single most spectacular medical teacher you will ever have! I love this man. He has clarified everything from the coagulation cascade, immunology, neurology, and embryology. His sense of humor and brilliant illustrations make everything stick well in your memory. His ability to illustrate 3-dimensional relationships has been useful for excelling in anatomy. I cannot thank you enough for all the wonderful work you do. I recommend your lectures to anyone who wants to truly understand medicine!Ann Ilaria Mayrhofer London School of Hygiene.I'm grappling with my online studies in Infectious Disease at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. It's made me realize what a visual learner I still am. So these vids are making what was murky crystal clear. While I am easily distracted when I have to do hours of straight reading, I am glued to the videos. I've looked for a series of such videos for months. A million thanks - Dr Najeeb has a true passion for teaching and can convey highly complex topics in an understandable and fun way.


Attendance by proxy is just as important as oxygen for all students who study medicine. Even I am guilty of asking classmates to impersonate me and on more than one occasion have had two friends answer my roll call at the same time, much to the amusement of the professor and the class. When the lights go down in the lecture hall and the PowerPoint slides go up, the full-blown air-conditioned environment and the monotony of the lecture are perfect triggers for afternoon naps. The physiological phenomenon of postprandial somnolence is my defence to most people, who understand the phrase. In my state of drowsiness, I would conduct an impromptu survey of the people around me and most of the class would be in the same state as yours truly.




Dr. Najeeb medical lecture video




Section 5.8 of UGC regulations of 2003, which governs all colleges in India, states that a student is eligible to appear for an examination only if she has an attendance of more than 75%.[1] Judges in the various cases in high courts have repeatedly stressed on the importance of attending classes, even going on to say that 'No student can excel in her life unless she attends the classes of the courses which she undertakes'. In a landmark case in Delhi, where students of Jamia Millia Islamia pleaded that their attendance be waived on the basis of the medical certificates they produced, the high court said that it does sympathize with the students who will have to waste a year of their education but 'indulging to such requests would lead to complete chaos and open up a pandora's box'.[2] In one case even relief was denied to an LLB student because of pregnancy.[3]


Intuitively speaking it seems pretty straight forward; lectures have historically been the sole method of imparting knowledge to the masses. One can argue that if someone attends classes she is bound to score well in her examinations, there have been studies[4] corroborating this finding that medical students who attend more classes had higher scores.


Although the importance of attending classes has been well established, yet there seems to be a rising trend of a marked decrease in attendance in medical schools in the USA and all over the world.[5] Even prestigious institutes such as Harvard and Johns Hopkins have seen a drop in their classroom attendance to 30%-40%. Thus, raising the question of how important is the role of the teacher in attracting students to their classes because in these institutes even Nobel laureates have had to teach to empty seats. Availability of online video lectures from various sources (recorded by the institute, Kaplan, Pathoma, etc.) is an important factor contributing to this absenteeism.[6] Students including...


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