<p>I have kaplans, barrons, pr. How should I prepare now? I took precalc last year and have been doing calc ever since...</p>
<p>i started studying for the test (6 more days) about a week ago.
The Barron's book is good but VERY hard. There's a thread similar somewhere around here similar to this. Everyone says barrons is hard but pays off in the end.</p>
<p>I've been studying off kaplan, and sparknotes ... and im getting 720's on the practice tests.
I just got the barrons, pr, and mcgraw today ... to help me get the 800. </p>
<p>So in simple words to answer your question, kaplan and pr, because there isnt enough time to go through the details in barron. When stuck on a section refer to barrons. O and when studying functions ... use barrons (you'll see why) </p>
<p>hope that helps</p>
<p>^ what he said</p>
<p>and learn your formulas!!</p>
<p>what crispsoph said.</p>
<p>If you're in calculus, you definitely have the problem solving skills necessary to get an 800 on the SAT II math. Just make sure you know the alg II/precal formulas.</p>
<p>I hated barron's book. I didn't like the format and the questions were much harder than those on the test. I used the McGraw Hill book (basically becase I found it for really cheap at a discount books store) for about three weeks and got my 710 up to an 800. I haven't seen their math II one, but Princeton review's books are usually amazing...</p>
<p>Barrons had some sections that were an extreme waste of time in my opinion but I would still recommend it. Don't spend a lot of time on Ch. 3 because there isn't much of sin cos tan graphs on the exam. (That's my weakness so I studied it a lot and on the test it didn't even come >_>)</p>