I just got my results for the clinical (part 2) and passed at the second attempt. I am so happy!
I have to say that when I took it first time in June I was really stressed with a whole lot of other stuff and didn't revise hardly at all! So I swotted hard for about 6-8 weeks this time and passed with a very good mark. It's not so hard, but it is very nerve-racking, and you have to have all the answers readily available. Just remember it is entry-level physio, and new grads (Canadian trained) are expected to pass it! Don't get too involved, stick to the basics!
MSK is a big part of the exam, and the Canadians mostly use David Magee's "Orthopaedic physical assessment". I also found Wheelers Textbook of Orthopaedics (fully available free online!!) very useful.
You need to revise all the anatomy especially of the upper and lower limb and a question is likely on the effect of a specific nerve damage. Learn all the main tests for various joints and nerve injuries. Revise protocols and precautions for knee and hip replacements. Back and neck assessment and differential diagnoses. TMJ disfunction might come up.
Revise the usual orthopaedic/rheumatic conditions. Correct use of various walking aids. Sports injuries and stretching regimes may come up. They want you to say things like how many reps, how often etc, and make sure you ask the client if they have any questions and if they understand what you have told them. Stuff like that.
Use of modalities, contra-indications. You may be asked to advise over a home wax programme or set up a treatment for IFT, US etc ....
ALWAYS GET CONSENT. ALWAYS explain to the client who you are, why you're there (not because you are taking an exam! ) and what you are going to do. ALWAYS check brakes are on on beds and wheelchairs. Look around and if you see equipment eg transfer belt, in the room then you ARE expected to use it. If you are getting a client to transfer eg bed to chair, just do as you would in real-life .... make sure you don't pull any tubes/drains out!
Neuro: Know the Signs and symptoms eg of Parkinsons, how to check for sensation, test various ascending tracts, muscle power, grades of spasticity, how to perform passive movements. Balance tests etc. Spinal cord injuries, levels and functional expectation/ability/problems. Know a little about the more obscure neuro things like ME, post-polio syndrome, MG, syringomyelia.
Cardio-respiratory: I used Alexandra Hough's Book. Revise the common conditions and their management. Postural drainage positions. Lung field surface anatomy. Be prepared to demonstrate auscultation and percussion and manual chest PT techniques. Precautions and contraindications for treatment. Know the normal parameters for blood gases, acidosis and alkalosis. Know the normal heart and resp rates. Practise on a friend!
Some of the marks are clearly on your handling and communication skills and you will usually have a "difficult" patient to deal with (eg dementing, brain-injured or non-compliant).
Apart from the above books I looked for any revision and quizzes etc I could find online and spent hours reading from all sorts of sites.
Try out the demonstration questions on the Alliance website (NB: some of them actually come up!)
You can usually work under mentorship after you have passed the written component. Ask your mentor to help you and if there are any new grads nearby who are taking the exam too, try to get into a study group.
Hope all the above helps a little. Everybody hates this exam. The Canadian grads think it is stupid and unnecessary waste of time and money, and are usually very sympathetic and willing to help others pass it!