<p>Hello, I am taking the SAT math level 2 on may 5th.</p>
<p>I was just wondering, how well would I do on the real test if I know how to solve every question in barrons?</p>
<p>I haven't even opened the book yet, but I am sure I will miss about 15 questions per test. Will I do well on the real test if I see the explanations on the back of the book, then resolve the tests a couple times making sure I get all the questions right and genuinely understand how to solve the type of quesition I missed?</p>
<p>By the way, I get around 780s on Kaplan tests, because of foolish (really foolish -_-;;) mistakes.</p>
<p>I excel in my pre-calc class too~</p>
<p>and I also have a copy of 15 realistic tests by Rusen Meylani, which I will delve into after mastering Barrons.</p>
<p>It's a waste of time to try to "master" Barron's-- take the tests, and use it as practice, but don't make yourself crazy trying to master every abstruse concept they throw at you.</p>
<p>Tests from like Kaplan or PR or Sparknotes are probably more indicative of your actual score.</p>
<p>Yeah, my study has been very similar to janihyo's. I went through all the book+tests. In each test I could solve like 32-40 questions before giving up. Resolved almost every question I missed. </p>
<p>And I am still worried about the test day...</p>
<p>you shouldnt get too caught up with the material that just seems like too much...because it probably wont end up on the test. if you're even CLOSE to mastering it, i wouldn't worry. personally, i went through the material review but avoided the practice tests.</p>