Developing a study plan

<p>I was wondering what is the most comprehensive study plan to achieving a 2200 on the sat? How should my daily study outline be, i planning to devote at least 1 1/2 hours each day, and 3 hours on the weekend to studying.This past weekend I purchased Kaplan 2400, Grubers Sat Review, College Board Blue Book, and Kaplan Sat spotlight. I was thinking I should tackle a critical reading section, a math section, as well as a writing section each day. Then taking 1 full sat on the weekend, by this i can find my weakness and focus on improving them. At the same time i will learn ten new vocab words each day, and read probably novel or some magazine, such as time. Do you think this is reasonable to acheive this score, if not what do you recommend?</p>

<p>I think it's more than reasonable.</p>

<p>That seems very reasonable! Its just sticking to it that is the hard part!</p>

<p>What seems to be working for me is; everything that you said,
and plus go through Baron's Verbal and Math Workbook, topic by topic. Do a topic a day, including the exercises; that way you get a hang of each chapter. Also, my counselor recommended that while I do my Vocab I make a list of the words I dont know and MAKE sentences with them, to help remembering them.</p>

<p>Don't memorize vocab..the easiest way to find meaning of words on the SAT is to study prefixes, suffixes, and root meanings</p>

<p>Another tip. When you are doing the math portion, don't just do it. Figure out the strategy or trick that you used</p>

<p>When are you taking the SAT?</p>

<p>It all depends on where you're starting from! If you're at a 1500 now then no I don't think it's reasonable. If you're at 2000 then sure. Take some practice tests and find out where you stand.</p>