<p>lately i've been taking several practice tests, and i believe the questions are fair, as compared to several other books like Princeton or Barrons. Can i expect these blue book questions to be similar to the real SAT?</p>
<p>Blue Book tests are SAT tests that have been given in the past. They are essentially as close as you can get to the SAT you will take.</p>
<p>Actually, not all the questions in the Blue Book have appeared on real tests, and none of the tests in the BB were give as complete tests...the BB came out before the 2005 change to new format tests. Some of the material was pulled form old SAT that were actually give, and some are new, untested questions.</p>
<p>In my experience, the BB tests are just slightly easier than actual SATs. They are still the best indicator of real SATs, but expect the real ones to be just a tiny bit tougher.</p>
<p>Hope that helps.</p>
<p>^ I did not know that. The BB cover makes it seem like these are actual tests. Curses, Collegeboard!</p>
<p>Thanks for the info, though :)</p>
<p>Yes. (10 characters)</p>
<p>agreed, BB is easier. I routinely scored 2200-2300 range and got a 2100, 2120, 2170 sueprscored</p>
<p>The Blue Book is really helpful. I used it to study and jumped from a 196 PSAT score to a 2200 SAT score.</p>
<p>In theory, the blue book SHOULD be the most accurate, but from my experience, the blue book isn't accurate at all. From what I've seen, the book was a lot easier than the real test. And that goes across all three sections. That's from my personal experience and I have spoken to others who agree.</p>
<p>I thought the SAT was exactly like the tests in the Blue Book. Obviously, the pressure is a lot higher, but if you prepare properly that shouldn't be an issue.</p>
<p>i was getting 1800s on bb and got 2010 on real. sooo ***</p>
<p>I got ~2150 in BB tests and got...lets just say almost perfect in the real thing. (not kidding)</p>