<p>okay so i fed up it seems impossible to do it :/ :( okay so thats my story i took my first sat on june 2012 and score 50 on the math section it was my first sat ever and i wasnt prepared anyway my highest score was on june 2013 690 with 6 left out and 0 mistakes i was happy with that. anyway later i scored 660 and iam stuck there with 2 consective scores of 660 i doubled checked my easy questions so i didnt reach till the end . iam the one with the highest math score in class i love math especially the sat one i feel its like a challenge or a puzzle. at home i score 720-740 (timed) with 50% of silly mistakes . i dont know what to do may is my last chance but i dont have much time bec iam preparing for phyiscs and us history :/ and tips advises from someone who was in my shoes </p>
<p>Unfortunately, speed is an important factor. If you spend too much time checking easy problems, you are not going to score an 800. My advice is to take a few timed tests to improve speed (particularly at the easy questions – you should be spending no more than 15-30 seconds each on the first few problems), and try some harder-than-level 5 problems on your own.</p>
<p>ill try this method but i always fear that i do u silly mistaks</p>
<p>For the first, work as fast as you can without compromising accuracy. This means carefully reading questions and doing calculations precisely. For the last 10, skip any you’re unsure about and move on. You can come back to them if you have time, but you may find easier questions as you go on.</p>
<p>My strategy for getting the 800 on the math section was to speed through each question (spending around 30 seconds on each question) If I wasn’t close at all to answering a question after 30 seconds, I would mark the question and continue. This should leave you with enough extra time to go back to the marked questions and do them. Practice is key. Good luck!</p>
<p>You need to find the right balance between going fast and reading carefully. Unfortunately, I didn’t find the right balance (freakin’ 1 wrong every single time!).</p>
<p>It’s those stupid mistakes from not reading a question carefully enough that will kill your score.</p>