<p>Know anyone who managed to do that and how they did it? Thanks!</p>
<p>Trying to figure out the same thing</p>
<p>Yeah 310 point increase from January to June this year, 1980 to 2290, math stayed around the same 760–>770. For writing (600—>750) , just learn all the rules for identifying the errors: subject verb, misplaced modifier, idioms etc… get a solid essay format down with 2-3 usable examples for all prompts, (at least for me that worked), for CR (620—>770) i highly recommend silverturtles guide, so good! gl!</p>
<p>I guess if you improve 100ish points in each section it is very possible. Actually, if you are in the mid 600s, you’ve still got a great shot at 2250+ if you work on each subject diligently. Good luck!</p>
<p>Nope, all the success stories on here are fake.</p>
<p>On a serious note, my score went from 1960 to 2290, which is a 330 point increase so yes it’s possible.</p>
<p>Hmm… I made a 1900 (750 CR, 520 M, 630 W). I’m aiming for a 2100 (800 CR, 600 M, 700 W) on the October SAT, as I’m a rising senior. Is it possible to get my score up 200 points in a few months? </p>
<p>If it hadn’t been for two stupid bubbling errors, I think I would’ve made a perfect score on CR… So I’m not worried about that. </p>
<p>My W score was so low because I only got to write a paragraph of my [awesome] essay… So I’m really not too worried about it either… I will brush up on my grammar though, ahah. </p>
<p>My M score, however… That’s another story. I either know the answer without doing any math, or am totally clueless and have to omit it… Other than going back over geometry from my sophomore year, what can I do to help me raise my math score? </p>
<p>Thanks in advance! And if anyone needs help with CR or W, let me know…!</p>
<p>@EliKresses</p>
<p>Way to hijack the thread. Also, your question has already been answered not only in this thread, but also in numerous other threads.</p>
<p>What I’m asking is essentially the same as what the OP is asking… And I offered help, too. Not sure if that really qualifies as hijacking, but whatever you say, bud…</p>
<p>I was scoring 1500s, and after a year of school my score naturally increased to the 1800s. I studied for the SAT throughout June, and managed to bring my score up from the 1800s to the 2300s (I haven’t taken the actual, but I’ve taken 10+ practice tests). It’s definitely possible, but you need to practice to improve.</p>
<p>For math, I just learn background information that I can apply to all of the questions, and I double check my answers to make sure I don’t make any stupid mistakes. For the writing section, I also learned some rules and idioms. For critical reading, I memorized ~50 vocab words daily, which REALLY helped (for both the sentence completion and passage-based questions). To get your critical reading score to the 700s range though, you need to take a lot of practice tests. Sooner or later, you’ll feel like the answer is blatantly given to you every time. </p>
<p>Everything is a matter of practice.</p>
<p>Everything is possible</p>
<p>It’s of course possible, my score went up from 1740 to 2140, which is exactly 400 points.</p>
<p>Technically, yes?</p>
<p>I went from 1500 freshman year → 2100 junior year.</p>
<p>Practice, practice, practice.</p>
<p>I went from a 1690 to a 2300.</p>
<p>Wow big jumps in score! Can anyone recommend how many practice tests i should take my average SAT score is about 1600 and i’ve only took 3 SAT’s so far. My highest subject is usually W and then math and then CR</p>
<p>Get the blue book if you don’t already own one… Take all 10, and I think you should get at least 1800~1900. Of course, after each test, you should evaluate which questions you got wrong and why.</p>
<p>Thanks Coolpillow. And I have the BB i got it about 4 days ago… I haven’t taken any tests in it yet.</p>