<p>I hope you will reconsider not taking a prep course.</p>
<p>The $1,000 you spend on a prep course now is a drop in the bucket, when compared to the cost of attending college for four years.</p>
<p>Given the importance of SAT scores, it would be a very good long term investment.</p>
<p>Consider it as spending $250 a year for each of your four years of college. You will spend that much on beer alone. Right?</p>
<p>Good SATs get you out of the starting gate quickly, in the race of life.</p>
<p>SAT prep courses, like Kaplan, know what they are doing. They have been in the business for 50 years.</p>
<p>Yes, you can indeed study on your own, but you stated in your post that you did not study for the SAT, at all, the first time. (With no explanation as to why). Why would you completely blow off such an obviously important task? Especially if you want to score a 2200 or 2300. If I were your father, given this track record, I would not be at all confident that you would do so this time on your own. (at least, not in the quantity that is needed)</p>
<p>My brother’s kid took an organized prep course during the summer, and treated it like a job, going to that office every day to take practice tests. He wound up at Yale. </p>
<p>I am confident that you will break 700 in math the next time. Mere familiarity with the exam will help you. And avoiding careless mistakes. And mastering timing issues. My kid raised his math score by 40 points, with zero studying.</p>
<p>And if you plan on majoring in a non-liberal arts subject, your CR score might not be that important to some schools.</p>
<p>So while I don’t know you, my suggestion, while it might seem counter-intuitive to you, is to concentrate on the math part of the exam, not on CR. I don’t think it is really possible to study for the CR part of the exam. But for math, you can keep drilling yourself on sample math questions. Math is easier to study for. It is a much more “concret” subject. And your CR score indicates that you are more math oriented. </p>
<p>Anyway, that is my advice. Take it or leave it, as you so choose.</p>
<p>Best of luck.</p>