<p>I'm curious as I've been on the mailing list for a while and am wondering as to what people can say as to its effectiveness in raising scores for the test-taking populace.</p>
<p>The questions seem to be easier than the real test.</p>
<p>Better than no practice at all.</p>
<p>Indeed. I always try to do them. It's just one question, and the questions range in difficulty, but it is definitely better than zero practice.</p>
<p>v_v" I hate when people say **** like that. "Better than nothing at all". Oh yeah, THANKS FOR ALL THE HELP, you guys!!!!1 </p>
<p>Okay, lets put this in real perspective.</p>
<p>If you already have the CB books and whatnot, would the Question a day really be worth it? Or is it a waste of time?</p>
<p>Well if it's going to kill you to log on to the computer to do the questions, then I suggest that you shouldn't do them.</p>
<p>It's additional practice made by College Board. It doesn't make sense not to do it. Also, once you've exhausted the prep books, you will want to get your hands on other practice problems. These problems are real SAT questions so how cannot it not be effective? It probably wouldn't raise scores significantly if you rely solely on it but coupled with the College Board book, it's a good tool for SAT prep. And it only gets you more familiar with the type of questions that appear on the SAT. </p>
<p>I do think the math questions are easier, though.</p>