<p>I scored a 760CR, 780M, and an 800W up from a 680CR, 710M, and a 650W taken my sophomore year. If you really, REALLY want that 2300, here's what you can do to try to replicate my success (no guarantees, though): </p>
<ol>
<li><p>take every college board test you can find. That's right, blue book, 10 Real SATS, Q&A, PSATs, etc. And study each and every one of them. Don't just take it to give yourself satisfaction -- use them as learning tools. Once you take a test, you TEAR IT APART. You analyze each answer choice, you FORCE YOURSELF to understand why each wrong answer is wrong and why the correct answer is correct. You don't ask others and you don't post on forums. You figure it out by yourself. Even if one problem takes you an hour to crack, then it's worth it and you've learned something. If someone just tells you, you'll make the same mistake OVER AND OVER AGAIN! </p></li>
<li><p>you commit to the studying daily. No *****, no cramming, just every day read some strategies and do some problems. Buy up a crapload of workbooks and do practice sets from each section of the test every day that you're not taking a real test. feel free to look at explanations for these -- you're going to torture yourself on the CB tests trying to figure out the answers, so you can have a slight break here. </p></li>
<li><p>keep your eyes on the prize. If you seem to not be improving, don't give up. KEEP WORKING AT IT! In order to succeed, you must fail. You will get questions wrong, you will feel like an idiot. But that's okay. The idea is that on the real deal, you get them right. On practice materials, getting * wrong isn't the end of the world, just make sure you NEVER make those same mistakes again. </p></li>
</ol>
<p>Yeah, so, it takes a lot to get a 2300, don't think it's just, "oh, let me read a few books and I'll magically get a 2300". There's nothin' in the books that common sense won't teach you. You need to practice and train your mind to solve problems. </p>
<p>To be frank: doing this won't guarantee a 2300, but it will bring you to your maximum. It will allow you to achieve what you're capable of, and if you can go from a 1940 to a 2140 using this method, or even to a 2100, then it'll have been worth it. a 2300's nice, and a 2400's sweeter, but the goal is to just do the best you can. </p>
<p>Good luck.</p>
<p>ADDENDUM: There's no point in aiming for a stupid number like 2320. You must aim for a 2400, even if you don't reach it. If you aim for a 2320, you'll get lower. I didn't aim for a 2340; I aimed for a 2400 and missed it.</p>