<p>How did you prepare for this? And im looking for answers with people that actually studied not those people that have been reading since they were 3 and naturally scored 2400's. :)</p>
<p>There should be a source that has all the grammar rules necessary(for error identifications) and such. Because the writing section should be one of the easiest given that they have a limited amount of rules they can test you on..</p>
<p>So once you get the grammar and study it and finish BB and maybe the online course too you should get a pretty good score.</p>
<p>What do you think about the Sparknotes 7 deadly screw-ups?</p>
<p>The seven deadlies is fine. There are about 14 grammar areas that are tested over and over.
I THINK RR has a list. Adam Robinson is one of the best SAT strategists. He is the man behind many of the Princeton guides.</p>
<p>And as far as Kaplan…save yourself the money. </p>
<p>you guys are talking about Rocket Review right? I’ve read about it a couple of times and on the internet i could only find the 2005-2006 version? Is that the only version? If so I’m going to order it as soon as possible…</p>
<p>@bigb - do you have anything more superior that wasn’t mentioned on this thread?</p>
<p>lol i’m with 112358. latin is so (annoyingly) precise with grammar that the SAT W was a cinch. even if you don’t learn it in depth, the basics would be extremely beneficial for you to learn (if you had the time, of course)</p>
<p>I find French helped me a lot. I would, for some reason, subconciously translate the sentence in my head, which helped. Not sure why I thought in French for the SAT though… it worked, I got a 760. Before with only English I got a 610.</p>