<p>Any tips, practice problems, personal thoughts, friends' stories, etc. would be welcomed!</p>
<p>Please be detailed, thank you :)</p>
<p>Any tips, practice problems, personal thoughts, friends' stories, etc. would be welcomed!</p>
<p>Please be detailed, thank you :)</p>
<p>going to china during the summer and taking an underground class that has all the sat answers…</p>
<p>UGH! do u realize how many times i hear that same question in a day? SO FRUSTRATING. THAT’S MY PROBLEM TOO.</p>
<p>rainbow, do you know how a forum works? There is usually something called a sticky. Stickies are something you must read first. And if you care to read the sticky, you will see that there are guides to improving sat scores. So the first step to achieving that 2400 is to
<p>I don’t really know what “details” and “specifics” you want.</p>
<p>But this is my advice.</p>
<p>First things first, both the SAT/ACT are STANDARDIZED tests, being that they have standards they need to follow and set. Essentially, all the questions in such tests have patterns of problems they follow. And as many people know, as soon as you know the pattern, you can figure out the rest. So, how do you figure out the pattern?
P R A C T I C E .</p>
<p>I can’t stress how important practice is. What I would recommend is (if you’re already proficient in math) get the Princeton Review, the Blue Book, the Barron’s book (w/e else) and practice to death all the tests in those books. Remember always to review EACH and EVERY question and look for trends among problems (especially the math and writing sections). However, if math is a struggling point, I would recommend getting a PR or Barron’s and reading over the review sections. I’m sorry if I couldn’t offer any “real” and “concrete” advice, but practice really does make perfect and that’s the only thing I could really tell you to do.</p>
<p>Thanks! That’s what I’m going to do :)</p>