<p>Tried something new this time:
1) Did all the questions in 10-15 minutes
2) Re-did the vast majority of the questions</p>
<p>Still got a 680 in the 10 Real SATs. A lot of the questions were stupid mistakes such as not considering the negative integers and such. One was blatantly not reading the question. It still is a improvement, because I did not get this high on the practice tests before.</p>
<p>10% of the people who take the IIc get an 800. IIc has a lot easier scale and people who take it are naturally good at math, as opposed as the SAT I taking population.</p>
<p>Princeton review. Don't bother doing the problems, just plug in the answers. Use their strategy for QuantComp, too, and estimating on those evil geometry problems. The TI-89 is your friend, just make sure you type everything in right. You should only have about 5 minutes left at most or you're going too fast and making mistakes. Double check the hard problems if you have 5 minutes, those are the ones you might screw up the most easily, and work backwards so you can double check the most and the ones that are freshest in your mind.</p>
<p>800 on Math IIC -the curve was REALLLLYYYY generous-. 740 and 760 on SAT I math. Never really prepared that seriously. Maybe I'm just a good Math student :) (or it may be due to the fact that I have done Multivariable Calculus when taking Math IIC). But if I were to pick one book for practice tests, that would be Kaplan. I got 770 on their practice test for Math IIC. As for SAT I math, well, just don't make mistakes, as even one mistake will be in expense of your perfect score.</p>