But buried on page 47, between a cartoon duck and an ad for “Dr. Mallard’s Hydration Supplement,” was something real: a tiny, hand-drawn flowchart of the Krebs cycle — accurate, memorable, and absurdly stick-figured.
Jenna had three days until the MCAT and a bank account with exactly $12 left. Desperate, she stumbled upon — a garish website promising “1,000 High-Yield Questions – Instant Download – $9.99.” quackprep.otg
The PDF opened with a header: Question #1: What is the mitochondria’s favorite dance? Answer choices: A) The Electric Slide, B) The ATP Tango, C) The Mighty Chloroplast Shuffle. Jenna laughed. Then panicked. She’d been scammed. But buried on page 47, between a cartoon
“No reviews, no contact info, and the ‘About Us’ photo is just a stock image of a raccoon in a lab coat,” she muttered. But the clock was louder than her doubt. Desperate, she stumbled upon — a garish website
Even a bad resource can become a good one — if you refuse to swallow it whole. When you spot a “quack,” don’t just laugh or curse. Let it drive you to verify, to search, to build your own reliable knowledge. The best test prep isn’t a site. It’s your own curiosity wearing a duck hat. Would you like a version with a different exam (SAT, GRE, nursing boards) or a specific moral angle (e.g., avoiding scams, critical thinking)?