14000 students did the UCAT in 2022, nearly a 400% increase since 2015
I meant that the competition is changing in the sense that people are on average getting better at it, not that there’s more people doing it
As most students know, it’s not just medical students who sit these UCAT exams but also those applying for dentistry and some of the other allied health degrees. What is less well known is that, because there’s no restriction on who sits these exams, there are a whole lot of other people sitting theses exams for reasons other than uni applications, including medical students (already in med schools) and even young doctors who are paid by coaching colleges to sit the exams for the purposes of accessing the question bank and even specialist doctors who sit it so they have an idea of what their high school kids can expect and they can help prepare them, since the previous generation of doctors didn’t sit UMAT/UCAT exams. My husband & I have even jokingly discussed sitting it to see who gets the higher score.
The organisers don’t restrict or monitor who sits the exam because medical students have to sit it if they want to transfer to another med school and there are some mature age individuals who decide that they want to try studying medicine. Let’s face it, at $300 per application, the organisers reap over $4M for a single day event. Therefore, the statistics on the percentiles required to get into each med school is unpredictably skewed by these ‘ring in’ candidates.