<p>This question's probably been asked quite a few number of times, but upon searching everyone just said to practice more, so I'm curious as to if there's any other strategies that have proven effective.</p>
<p>Anyways, I'm a high school junior who's about to take the SATs in the coming March exam, and I'm shooting for a 2350. Currently, I'm scoring around 2250 and I need the final boost to reach my goal. Any tips beyond just practice? I'm doing plenty of that, but results haven't been promising. Sorry if I'm beating a dead horse, just need some opinions.</p>
<p>Why do you need a perfect score when 2250 is already really high over the 95 percentile?
It depends on how the rest of your application looks like.</p>
<p>Uhh, actually, they’re quite even. I just took a practice test today, 740 in Math and Reading, 760 in Writing. The individual scores change around a bit depending on the test, but they generally add up to about 2250.</p>
<p>For the Math section, I would try to do a lot of the problems that you’re missing. Try to locate a pattern in your missed answers. For writting, you can learn a lot by just looking at questions that you’ve missed so you won’t repeat that specific mistake again. I don’t see your CR score up there, however, you should try to maybe underline as you go along and gather thoughts while you read. Your score is already pretty stellar and I assume that small errors are what’s really getting you. Work at it, I’m sure you’ll be successful:)</p>
<p>Thank you, I generally make around 4-5 mistakes per subject, and it’s really killing me that I can’t get the score that I need. My reading score is also 740, sorry, I had my reading and math scores lugged together.</p>