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4. How to Pass the Arab Board of Health Specializations (Arab Board Preliminary Exam) in Pediatrics

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 How to Pass the Arab Board of Health Specializations (Arab Board Preliminary Exam) in Pediatrics
==================================================================================================

  A practical, pediatrics-focused plan to master the preliminary MCQ paper without wasting time on the wrong material

  [     MDster Editorial Team ](https://mdster.com/about) ·      Apr 28, 2026  ·      8 min read  ·       26

  [     Reviewed by Dr. Ali Ragab, MBBCH, MSc, MCAI ](https://mdster.com/medical-reviewers/dr-ali-ragab) [Editorial Policy](https://mdster.com/editorial-policy) | [Corrections Policy](https://mdster.com/corrections)

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 The most common mistake I see with the **Arab Board of Health Specializations (Arab Board Preliminary Exam)** in Pediatrics is treating it like a miniature final clinical exam. It is not. As of **April 28, 2026**, the announced Pediatrics preliminary sitting is on **June 8, 2026**; the paper is **one English-language electronic MCQ exam with 100 questions in 2 hours**, and the application deadline for that sitting was **April 9, 2026**. If you are already registered, you have a short, focused runway. If you missed this sitting, use the same plan for your next exam window rather than drifting through random reading. [\[1\]](#cite-1 "Reference [1]")

Understand what this exam is really testing
-------------------------------------------

This exam is the **early cognitive checkpoint** of training, not the stage where you prove bedside examination technique or defend a logbook. For Pediatrics, the Arab Board lists three stages: **preliminary**, **final cognitive**, and **final practical**; the **final cognitive** requires research and a logbook, while the preliminary exam follows the general Arab Board conditions. That means your preparation should focus on **fast recognition of common pediatric problems, first-line management, and clean MCQ reasoning** rather than OSCE-style performance. [\[2\]](#cite-2 "Reference [2]")

Use this checklist before you open another book:

- I know the exam is **MCQ, English, electronic, 100 questions, 2 hours**.
- I am studying for a **written cognitive screen**, not a practical exam.
- My revision plan favors **common first-year pediatric presentations** over niche subspecialty detail. [\[1\]](#cite-1 "Reference [1]")

Build your topic order from the first-year curriculum
-----------------------------------------------------

Do not guess what is high yield. The official Pediatrics guidebook gives you a better map. In the **first year**, your blocks are weighted toward **General Pediatrics (4 blocks), Neonatology (2), and Pediatric Emergency Room (2.5)**. Together, that is **8.5 of 13 first-year blocks**, so these areas should get most of your study time. The same guide also includes **Pediatric Hematology, Pediatric Infection, Pediatric Surgery &amp; Anesthesia**, plus **PALS, BLS, communication skills, and NRP** exposure. [\[3\]](#cite-3 "Reference [3]")

A practical priority list looks like this:

1. **General pediatrics + ER**: respiratory distress, dehydration, seizures, shock, common ward and call-room decisions.
2. **Neonatology**: jaundice, sepsis, respiratory distress, prematurity basics, newborn resuscitation steps.
3. **Infection + hematology**: febrile child approach, immunization logic, anemia and bleeding basics.
4. **Surgical and anesthesia interfaces**: acute abdomen, perioperative red flags, stabilization before referral.

For each topic, make a one-page grid with four columns: **presentation, key clues, first step, common trap**. That format matches how MCQs are written and stops you from producing beautiful but useless notes.

> **Pro Tip:** If a problem can deteriorate quickly during an intern-level or junior resident shift, it belongs in your A-list for the preliminary exam.

Study Schedule Template
-----------------------

If you are sitting the **June 8, 2026** exam, you have about six weeks left from late April. Use a **6-week sprint** instead of endless reading. [\[1\]](#cite-1 "Reference [1]")

WeekMain focusDaily targetEnd-of-week output1General pediatrics foundations30-40 timed MCQs + 30 min reviewOne sheet on fluids, growth, common respiratory illness2Pediatric ER40-50 timed MCQsEmergency algorithms deck: seizure, shock, asthma, dehydration3Neonatology40-50 timed MCQsNewborn sheet: jaundice, sepsis, distress, prematurity4Infection, hematology, immunization30-40 timed MCQs + flashcardsError log sorted by diagnosis vs management mistakes5Mixed blocks2 full mocks of 100 questions in 2 hoursPacing fixes and weak-topic list6Final consolidationWrong answers only + 20-question mini-mocksFinal rapid-review packet

On workdays, aim for **one focused study block plus MCQs**. On off-days, do **two blocks**, but keep both active: questions, flashcards, or oral recall. Reading should happen **after** you miss questions, not before.

Train for the actual paper, not your comfort zone
-------------------------------------------------

A 2-hour paper for 100 questions gives you an average of **72 seconds per question**. That is why candidates who “know the material” still underperform: they have never trained at exam speed. Do at least **two full simulations** in one sitting, on a screen, with no pauses, because the real exam is a **single electronic paper**. [\[1\]](#cite-1 "Reference [1]")

Use a three-pass method:

1. **Pass 1:** answer what you know in under a minute.
2. **Pass 2:** work through the marked questions that need short reasoning.
3. **Pass 3:** make disciplined final choices; do not leave time-consuming questions to emotionally drain you early.

Because the exam is in **English**, build a small language list if your daily training is mostly in Arabic: terms like *bilious vomiting*, *grunting*, *bulging fontanelle*, *failure to thrive*, *stridor*, and *bounding pulses*. This is not vocabulary for its own sake; it prevents you from losing marks to wording rather than knowledge. [\[1\]](#cite-1 "Reference [1]")

Use resources the right way
---------------------------

For this exam part, use resources in a strict order:

- **Question bank first:** this shows you how Pediatrics knowledge is tested.
- **Core textbook second:** read only the sections that explain your wrong answers.
- **Flashcards third:** reserve them for facts that must be recalled quickly—milestones, vaccine timing, murmurs, neonatal thresholds, fluid formulas.
- **Study group once weekly:** 60-90 minutes, one topic, one person explains why each distractor is wrong.

Keep an **error log** with four headings: *knowledge gap, misread stem, changed right answer to wrong answer, slow decision*. This tells you whether your problem is content, attention, or pacing.

> **Pro Tip:** If your revision note is longer than one phone screen, it probably belongs to the final cognitive exam, not the preliminary one.

Common Pitfalls
---------------

The candidates who struggle most usually do one of five things:

- They read subspecialty chapters cover to cover before mastering **general pediatrics, neonatology, and ER**.
- They study passively and delay timed MCQs.
- They ignore resuscitation and first-step management questions even though the first-year curriculum clearly includes those areas. [\[3\]](#cite-3 "Reference [3]")
- They forget the **electronic exam logistics**: institutional email activation, mandatory practice test, ID requirements, and upload confirmation before leaving. The Arab Board instructions for knowledge-based exams also emphasize arriving by **9:00 AM Makkah time**, with the exam starting at **10:00 AM**, and no late entry after that time. [\[4\]](#cite-4 "Reference [4]")
- They keep changing answers without new evidence.

Key Takeaways
-------------

This week, do these five things:

- Build your revision map from the **first-year Pediatrics blocks**.
- Complete your first **150-200 timed MCQs** and review every error.
- Create one-page sheets for **ER, neonatology, infection, and hematology**.
- Schedule **two full 100-question mocks** before exam week.
- Finish your **technical prep**: institutional email, practice exam, ID, route to the center, and exam-day timing. [\[3\]](#cite-3 "Reference [3]")

The preliminary exam is very passable when you stop studying like a future subspecialist and start answering like a safe, fast, first-line pediatric doctor. Narrow the scope, train the format, and make every study session look like the paper you are about to sit.

    Frequently Asked Questions
----------------------------

 ###     Should I prepare for OSCE-style stations while studying for the Pediatrics preliminary exam?

No. The preliminary Pediatrics exam is the early **cognitive** stage, while the Arab Board lists the **final practical** separately. Your priority now should be MCQ speed, common pediatric presentations, and first-line management. [\[2\]](#cite-2 "Reference [2]")

###     What should I prioritize if I have very limited time left?

Start with the areas that dominate the first-year curriculum: **general pediatrics, pediatric ER, and neonatology**, then move to infection and hematology. That gives you the best return for a short study window. [\[3\]](#cite-3 "Reference [3]")

###     Do I need a huge textbook to pass this exam?

No. Use a core pediatrics text selectively. Your main engine should be **timed MCQs**, with textbook reading only to repair weak areas exposed by questions.

###     What exam-day logistics are easy to underestimate?

Candidates often forget the technical steps: activate the institutional email, complete the required practice test, arrive early, bring ID, and make sure your answers fully upload before leaving the center. [\[4\]](#cite-4 "Reference [4]")

        References  (4)
------------------

 1. 1.  [ Arab Board of Health Specializations — Preliminary Exam for Pediatrics announcement (14 January 2026)     ](https://www.arab-board.org/advertisement/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%AA%D8%AD%D8%A7%D9%86-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D9%88%D9%84%D9%8A-%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%AE%D8%AA%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%B5-%D8%B7%D8%A8-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A3%D8%B7%D9%81%D8%A7%D9%84)   [↩](#cite-ref-1-1 "Back to text")
2. 2.  [ Arab Board of Health Specializations — Pediatrics specialty page     ](https://www.arab-board.org/Scientific-Councils/Pediatrics/Pediatrics)   [↩](#cite-ref-2-1 "Back to text")
3. 3.  [ Arab Board Scientific Council of Pediatrics — Guidebook of Pediatrics     ](https://www.arab-board.org/file-download/download/public/2331)   [↩](#cite-ref-3-1 "Back to text")
4. 4.  [ Arab Board of Health Specializations — Instructions for Candidates of the Knowledge-Based Examinations (November 2025)     ](https://www.arab-board.org/sites/default/files/2025-11/Instructions-for-Candidates-of-the-Knowledge-Based-Examinations-November-2025.pdf)   [↩](#cite-ref-4-1 "Back to text")

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