College board blue book Sucks!

<p>Yeah, I know every single person on this forum always says to take the practice tests in the college board practice book becuase those are the most accurate.</p>

<p>However, the reason I am hesitant to take these tests and I would rather take the tests in Princeton Review is that the blue book does NOT HAVE ANSWER EXPLANATIONS!</p>

<p>Reviewing your answers is supposed to be the most important part of improving your score, so how can you improve ur score a lot if you dont have them?/</p>

<p>Also, I know there is a online course you can sign up for that wil give you answer explanations, but I don't want to pay a lot more extra money for something that was supposed to be included in the book in the first place!</p>

<p>figure them out yourself…you dont need explanations. if you need help with questions just post them on this forum</p>

<p>There’s a plethora of explanations on the Internet. Open your eyes and search!</p>

<p>Most challenging questions have already been explained on this forum anyways, so just search for them.</p>

<p>The OC is only $60 with the discount.</p>

<p>If you have the second edition blue book, then there are free answers and explanations online at the collegeboard website, [Welcome</a> to the Official SAT Study Guide Book Owner’s Area](<a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>SAT Practice and Preparation – SAT Suite | College Board). I just used it myself, since I just bought the blue book today.</p>

<p>The fact that it has no explanations is one of the many qualities that makes it so good. Figure it out yourself. You’ll learn more.</p>

<p>If you choose to not follow advice that has been proven time and time again, that’s your choice. Just don’t come crying to us when you get a 1630 :)</p>

<p>I find this a legitimate problem too-- you can never find out why you were wrong for problems you didn’t know how to do in the slighest clue.</p>

<p>@ cjgone, if you look at my post a few spots above yours, I posted to a link where you could get explanations for free on Collegeboard’s website.</p>