<p>If I were to take 8 practice tests, how much would that benefit me?</p>
<p>On your own? I think that’ll help a lot, especially the 8 from Big Blue. It’ll give you a sense of what the real SAT is like, and the errors you make will teach you how not to make them again.</p>
<p>If you took the test, then went over your answers, saw why the correct answer was the correct answer, probably a lot. I’m guessing 150+ points depending on your current score.</p>
<p>If you were to just take the tests, probably not a lot. If you analyzed the test, though, probably a lot.</p>
<p>I’m using Princeton Review, so it might help being more difficult than BB(?).</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>It won’t help because it’s nothing like the BB. The tests are inaccurate and the increase in difficulty is unnecessary.</p>
<p>^Eh, no need for such extreme language. It is like saying a TI is nothing like a Casio. Sure, they are very different on some planes, but fundamentally, they are functional graphing calculators. </p>
<p>Anyway, that being said, I think PR will help you a bit, but to really be benefited you need a real taste of the SATs, which you can only get from CB. Use PR for stradegies and maybe a couple tests, then which to CB.</p>