I am verrrrrrry slooooooowww

<p>Uhhhhh I can get math very quickly and usually finsh with like 10 minutes to spare. BUT the writing section bugs me cause i have got no clue how to become a better writer and how to learn those hard, tricky, little grammatical errors. Also, I usually dont understand what the reading is about in the critical reading. Could anyone give me anytips on how i can better myself at the grammar section and the analysis of the reading those parts i barely finish with less tan a minute to spare........</p>

<p>The best thing you could do for the writing is to do the practice quizzes and read why your answer was correct/incorrect. Thats what I did and I went from 52% on practice quizzes to 82%+ on them now (only 3 days later).</p>

<p>I've been reading the Opinions' section from News Articles. Trying to develop my own style of writing by learning and incorporating bits and pieces from other authors.</p>

<p>For writing, find a book that tells you what type of question you are doing. For example, for question #1-5, the questions are subject pronoun related. It's better that way.</p>

<p>On the reading section, try just skipping the passage and going directly to the questions. The questions will refer to a line in the passage, and then you can go back to that line and look for the answer. My nephew showed me this great new website that had a video about this CR strategy at <a href="http://www.***.com%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.***.com&lt;/a>. There are also some good tips on <a href="http://www.collegeboard.com%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.collegeboard.com&lt;/a>. Sometimes reading the entire passage just takes too much time and you get bogged down in the details that may not be applicable to any of the actual questions. Try this on your practice tests and see if it helps to cut your time down. You may have to try a couple of ideas to find what will work best for you.</p>

<p>wow, i'm just the opposite of the OP</p>