How to increase SAT CR score?

<p>My daughter will be a junior in high school next year. She has straight A's. She's taken 2 AP exams with scores of 5 and 4. She's taken 2 SAT II tests and has scored very well. She's also scored very high in the National Latin Exam. Here's the problem --she took the PSAT last year as a sophomore and scored very low in CR -- mid 40s.</p>

<p>My older child had the same problem. She completed 6 AP exams and scored above 700in the Math section of the SAT but barely broke 500 in CR. Interestingly, she was a very early reader and always scored very high in other standardized tests. I spent lots of money for a PR tutor (I would not recommend) and she still didn't increase her score. (Note -- It did not hurt her college acceptances and she did not receive any rejection letters. Because of her AP scores she started her freshman year as a sophomore and is doing wonderfully. She had no problems with the freshman English testing or her freshman English course.)</p>

<p>My younger daughter is very concerned that the pattern will repeat itself with her. She is an exceptionally motivated child. How can she significantly increase her CR score? I don't understand how she can perform so well in Latin and History tests but not be able to crack the code for the SAT CR exam.</p>

<p>Any suggestions?</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>My d faced a similar situation - CR scores on the PSAT not really in keeping with how well she knew she could do. I posted this thread:</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=280702%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=280702&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>and got wonderful advice earlier this year. She was able to raise her CR score 110 points, primarily due to the help provided by posters on that thread. (Post #19 details what she did to improve her score.) My d's not unmotivated, however. Still, she didn't spend more than an hour per week on prep, with the exception of the day she took a practice SAT under test conditions (not a happy camper that day, but she was willing to do it nevertheless). </p>

<p>It sounds to me, based on her high academic achievements, as if your older d must have been overthinking the questions. As corranged pointed out in my thread, the answers will always be found in the text; there's not much interpretation needed.</p>

<p>You haven't mentioned your d's Writing score, but I notice she's a Latin student. Though I'd always heard that Latin will increase a student's SAT performance, I don't credit it with improving writing skills. One of my ds is a Latin whiz, but had a kind of fractured writing style until she discovered that she was patterning her sentences in English according to Latin usage. In other words, as her sister said, "She writes like Yoda talks." :)</p>

<p>The quick answer- Let her take the ACT.
There is just something about the SAT test- especially the CR portion.
For some kids, no matter how motivated, great readers etc, they just cannot go beyond a certain level with that test.<br>
My "unproven theory" on the CR portion is that it is filled with long, nit picking differences and intentionally confusing passages. For kids with certain learning styles - this type of reading passage is "mindblowing"
The ACT is a much more straightforward test and may be more of an accurate indicator of reading and comprehension abilities. It's purpose is to test one's abilities and not trick the student.
Let her try the ACT. I suggest she get the practice book- take 2 to 3 practice tests to familiarize herself with the format and give it a shot. It's a lot less frustrating than the SAT test.</p>

<p>My theory is that the SAT CR tests the ability to read difficult, technical texts. My son read programming manuals online. That seemed to boost his score enormously. Go figure.</p>

<p>My oldest made 150 flashcards of the SAT words he didn't know. He memorized them in the weeks before the test. That boosted his score 100 points. My youngest used his brother's cards and memorized them in a week flat--after dinner sessions that lasted 90 minutes.</p>

<p>Good luck!</p>

<p>What does your daughter read for fun?</p>

<p>Where does one get these SAT words, cheers?</p>

<p>The Princeton Review books have them in the back in a list. Tell your D to cross out the ones she knows and make flashcards of the ones she doesn't know. You can help her memorize. I would only give mine 30 seconds to recall the definition--then the card went back to the "Dunno it" pile. </p>

<p>We had some loud 'memorization' sessions, I tell you what.</p>

<p>The common thought was that the word memorization only helped with analogies, but my younger son found it very helpful for the new CR test last year.</p>

<p>Save those cards too. We've lent them to many other testers.</p>

<p>Thanks! D mentioned last night that she might actually put in some effort to try to up her CR score on this fall's PSAT. Off to the local bookstore to strike while the iron is HOT!</p>

<p>ellemenope - here's an old thread that has a list of 250 or so words that the CC kids put together from most of the Blue Book practice tests. As they worked each test they listed the "hard" words with their definitions. I believe Xiggi made a similar list from the old Red Book practice tests but I'm not sure if that's on here or not.</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=154585&page=2%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=154585&page=2&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>We have a box of SAT cards we never used them much, but since they sat on the dining room table we'd pull them out and test everyone at the table on a handful of them. I don't think we got past the As! My son scored 800 twice on the CR - I always credited it withe the sci fi and fantasy he reads (at least 100 novels a year), but like Cheers' son he also reads lots of technical stuff on the web.</p>

<p>Thanks for all of the suggestions. As for the question -- What does she read for fun? Answer -- Not enough. She is a great student and studier and always has a great deal of required reading for school but she doesn't read for pleasure nearly enough as I did when I was her age. </p>

<p>I'm glad she took the test in 10th grade so that she will have opportunity to improve. She scored a 730 in US History, a silver medal maxima cum laude in the National Latin IV exam, a 4 and a 5 in APs and can't break 500 in the CR SAT.....go figure!! </p>

<p>Thanks for the suggestions -- she is a motivated student so hopefully will be able to turn this around.</p>

<p>Frazzled --- I will read the suggestions that you sent. Hopefully she'll be able to bring this score up as your daughter did. </p>

<p>Manny1 -- I will look into the ACT. She's always done well on other standardized tests as did my older daughter...for some reason, however, this CR is proving to be a challenge! Both of my daughters have complained that the subject matter is especially dull.</p>

<p>Take heart that sometimes testing situations are just odd----and that perhaps a "I CAN" attitude will also help(in addition to all the other great suggestions!)</p>

<p>One of my best friends scored in the low 50s for the math section on her PSAT, then got 690 on the actual exam (with no practice inbetween). I also had a 130 pt math increase between two sittings with minimal practice. I have another friend who scored in the mid 60s in her reading for the PSAT and then an 800, or close to it, on the actual exam. Both of my friends had never really practiced, so it was their first time even taking the test---their lower scores were due to the "oh, format, hmm..." adjustment---and this might be true with your daughter too. </p>

<p>For my friend and I who had a big math difference, we both found that the only difference between the two exams had been confidence. Both of us had been floundering in calculus courses during our first sittings and had come to severely doubt our mathematical ability--and we took that attitude into the tests. In the meantime between the 1st and 2nd test, we finally managed to get a footing in our courses and it was a boost in our own confidence---I went into the testing promising myself that I could slaughter it, and did. </p>

<p>Try to make sure it doesn't get her down--an idealistic attitude can also work wonders! (and it might've been a one time thing, too!)</p>

<p>WOW mathmom! 800 twice on the CR. reading! That is incredible! Kudos!!<br>
To the OP-
If you dau is just a rising junior, I am sure her scores will improve just due to, as they say, tincture of time. My s's cr reading scores increased each yr (grades 9, 10, 11) from 54 to 63 to 71. I went back and read the link that frazzled posted to her previous thread, and read the link Carolyn posted there to the PSAT review page (I forget the exact name of the link, but it is in frazzled's thread). They were very helpful. So are the suggestions here. Your dau does have the opportunity to bring her scores up, and if you are willing to let her get a little private tutoring to teach her strategies, I would suggest that. The tutor can certainly also help with the specifics (learning vocab, dissecting the previous cr reading seeays/tests, etc) but the strategy of how to test is really helpful, and can boost her morale as well as her skill. What we chose to do was to get some tutoring over that late summer/early fall before the PSAT, and then have s take the SAT right after the PSAT, since he had been practicing and was ready. It turned out to be a great idea! He did well on both the PSAT and SAT, and then chose not to retake the SAT this past June, even though he'd registered for it.
Interestingly, the link Carolyn provided (thanks Carolyn) had s's predicted CR Reading SAT score (based on the PSAT) as a little different on the online CB site than on the thing we got in the mail from CB. Not sure why that was, since it ws based on the same test administration. Oh well. </p>

<p>At any rate, I would strongly encourrage you to go for it-- the extra guidance was really helpful! We are glad we did it.</p>

<p>Another note about math scores, though I know the OP was asking about CR:</p>

<p>DS, a math geek, was surprised that one of his math scores on the ACT wasn't higher. </p>

<p>His take after thinking about it was that he was making everyting too complicated. He was taking his first calculus class at the time and was using calculus to solve problems that didn't need it. You know: when the tool you have is a hammer, everything starts looking like a nail.</p>

<p>He retook the test with that bit of insight and did much better.</p>

<p>I read this thread and all the good suggestions in the links. I've seen students who raise their SAT scores 80-100 points by vocab study, but those were the "last" 80-100 points (going from the 700's to the 780 or 800 stratosphere). But others have all kinds of experiences. It can only help a student in every way to do that dinnertime flashcard routine, but just don't stop there because if the PSAT's show in the 40's something else is also going on that needs to be addressed.</p>

<p>Some posters say their kids overanalyze the passage, so just lightening up on that helps; "the answers are all in the passage..." not from general knowledge, in other words.</p>

<p>But there's an opposite possibility, too. Lots of kids, especially those who don't quite read enough as the OP suggested, have trouble distinguishing between denotation and connotation in a written text. Denotation is what the words actually say, connotation is what the words might mean to someone particular. I just asked my college-age daughter for a good example, and she came up with a goodie: On a cigarette package, there is a warning, "Cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health." So the literal meaning, the denotation, is that "if you smoke this, you might get sick."<br>
But the connotation, to teenaged readers, is "Neat! Cigarettes are cool because grownups are warning me against them!"
Sidenote: as we parents all know, one of the hardest things for teens to do is consider things from another person's viewpoint, not their own!</p>

<p>Now imagine a passage where they write about cigarettes and warnings, and drop a hint about a reader in the passage who demonstrates some oppositional thinking to adult lessons...THEN they ask what the cigarette warning words "mean."
One test-taker will answer what it means to them, but the other test-taker will get a higher score by first asking, "are they asking what I think it means, or what the person in the story might think?"
Once they nail down whose point-of-view is being asked for, if it's about the kid in the story who evades adult wisdom, then the kid must project what meaning THAT kid would derive from the cigarette package warning.</p>

<p>So that's three sub-skills: !) Be ready to forego one's own point-of-view and recognize they often ask about the character's point-of-view; 2) Be able to pick up little clues and hints about the other character and his point-of-view;
3) Be able to extrapolate, extend, apply the other character's point-of-view into the test question. In other words, if the story-kid (not the test-taker) generally detests parental advice, he would/could/might take the warning to mean, "Cigarettes are cool because adults are warning me off of them."
Nowhere in the passage would it say precisely that the character thinks cigs are cool, and they won't show the character actively disobeying and smoking..that's all too literal. Rather, they would set it up with little "hints" about other things the character does to indiicate he resists adult guidance, cares about peer thinking, is oblivious to health, etc.
Now, after reading all the above, try to answer this test question, "What does the character believe about the warning on the cigarette package" a) Cigarettes could hurt me. b) If I smoke, people will admire me.</p>

<p>So I guess the OP might see if her D needs to look harder into the passage. That's usually it, but when you say, "the answer is all in the passage..." that's even true above. Just also consider and learn how to distinguish denotation from connotation. That's also "all in the passage" but it doesn't hit you like a<br>
ton of bricks, exactly.</p>

<p>I also had a word/definition list that I wrote on post-its and stuck up around the place. I wrote them in English and worked them out in other languages I was learning as it made me focus on them a bit more to work out what they would be in other languages and also I found it much harder just to walk past and ignore them when I caught sight of foreign words I didn't know. It also helped my vocabulary in the other languages.</p>

<p>She should think about what it is that she is struggling with. Is it a lack of vocabulary, or how to read the text, or is it more how to answer the questions and choose answers to disregard?</p>

<p>My D signed up for a word a day from dictionary.com. She like to take her time to learn them,ie no pressure. She has been doing this since 9th grade.</p>

<p>
[quote]
WOW mathmom! 800 twice on the CR. reading! That is incredible! Kudos!!

[/quote]
Thanks. It's kind of a joke in our house, because he's always hated English classes. He gets B's in English, A's in everything else. He's much better at math and science, but never managed to get an 800 in the math. (He did just fine, but you can't even make one careless mistake in math.)</p>

<p>Mine had a similar experience, mathmom! Much better at math than writing. Always, always. But, he made 1 mistake on the math and got a 770. Wicked curve! To our TOTAL shock, his writing score was higher. We almost fell out of our chairs!! The Cr. Reading score was lower, but good enough, so he decided not to retake. You too???</p>

<p>Pretty much. He got two wrong the first time he took the math for a 760. (His mistakes were on 4th grade level problems. :rolleyes:) 770 with one mistake the second time. Again something silly like misreading the question. He only retook because he was trying to get the writing score into the 700s.</p>