<p>Haha, I know it sounds extremely ambitious, but any tips? =]</p>
<p>My breakdown was 680 CR, 700 M, and 740 W (12 on the essay)</p>
<p>Haha, I know it sounds extremely ambitious, but any tips? =]</p>
<p>My breakdown was 680 CR, 700 M, and 740 W (12 on the essay)</p>
<p>Just keep on studying. That’s what I did to jump from 2000 to 2260 on my practice tests. My goal is 2300+ too. You broke the 2100 barrier so from here on it should be just making sure to make 3-5 less mistakes overall to get over a 2300.</p>
<p>If you score in the 700’s on the math section, it probably means that you’re good at math and just make careless mistakes (like me LOL.) Similar problems are tested year after year so after you know all of the concepts, then it is really up to how aware you are of the question you’re answering. For math, if you can finish each section 5-10 minutes early, then don’t just close your book. Make sure to double check all of your answers. And when you’re working on the questions, don’t rush. If you rush, you’ll more likely misread the question or make a really small technical error. </p>
<p>For the writing, if you had problems with the essay, then just journal every day. Seriously, it really helps. Journal about topics you’re passionate about, and practice stating your stance. When I journal, I choose about 13 vocabulary words I had never heard of before, and I use them in the proper context, which helps me with the CR section. After I finish my journal entries (I usually write about 7 pages in an hour), I proofread them to practice for the writing section.</p>
<p>And I dunno for CR. o3o</p>
<p>^ Good essay advice, but seeing as OP got a 12, I don’t think that’s what he/she needs to work on.</p>
<p>If you got a 740 W with a perfect essay, that means you probably just missed 4-5 MC questions. Look for the patterns, know the rules cold; there’s a limited range of grammar rules that the SAT tests. Take lots of practice tests until catching those errors is like second nature. Good luck!</p>
<p>For the CR passage questions, the best advice I can give is also just lots of practice. But more than that, make sure you read the answer explanation to every CR question afterward, even the ones you got right! As you look back at the test solutions, know why the right answers are the right answers, and more and more you’ll be able to spot them the first time around.</p>