<p>Who of u ever find it great? I skimmed through the sentence compeletion questions and found some really easy words for answers for Level C questions and hard ones for Level A!
By the way ,some of the reading questions seem illogical...lol</p>
<p>yo man how is it? is it bad? i am thinking of buying this or the aiming for perfect score</p>
<p>i actually found this workbook to be an excellent help, and i recommend it to anybody who is struggling with CR</p>
<p>but i heard barrons cr is not good for the real thing. true?</p>
<p>At least to me, there seems to be a huge difference between the questions from Barron's and CB. The answer choices from Barron's aren't really ironclad like those you see from CB. There seems to be too much room for interpretation w/ Barron's.</p>
<p>i really need help on CR. EVERYONE tells me to just read... but does anyone know of any good books or essays that wud actually HELP???
tell me how the workbook is, im really curious about it</p>
<p>o is that so simple1?
hmm...how did u prep, if u dont mind me asking?</p>
<p>While studying for the CR sections, I found online that there were actually several reading passages taken directly from the NYT. So </p>
<p>1) I started w/ a subscription from NYT and WSJ. Did the CB and PSAT CR questions. 2) I stayed away from the test prep coursebook, cuz there's something about their structure that just doesn't resonate in the same frequency as that from CB. 3) Memorized tons of vocab. </p>
<p>Das about it.</p>
<p>i got the barrons cr workbook and i thought it was decent, though a little hard to understand sometimes.</p>
<p>For cr, what I did was read a bunch of short stories and small books. I think "The Dubliners", a book of short stories written entirely by James Joyce, was a pretty good book for that sort of thing. If you're not too crazy about reading books, then don't go for long books. Basically read short stories and not giant novels</p>