<p>So I've bought the PWN THE SAT MATH GUIDE and it has been awesome! I'ts helped grasp the SAT math section much better. But, however, my scores are still on the low end. I took a practice test today after an sat prep hiatus to find my math score only a 600. I started at around a 570 and I have scored to a 640 on blue book practice tests. I've gone through solutions to these problems already and it seems they have done almost nothing. Should I go through all of the ones I got incorrect on the Bluebook again? How can I make sure that when I'm asked a different question, testing the same concepts, that I won't forget? I take the test on the 25th.</p>
<p>If you go through all of your incorrect answers and still can’t score noticeably higher, you might have hit your max. Reviewing the questions should make you immediately better for the next math SAT you take (as unlike the English portion, it is literally the “same” every time).</p>
<p>^ dont listen to this guy</p>
<p>everybody can get a 2400 with consistent, long-term practice. </p>
<p>Also, in my oppinion, the critical reading was the easiest section to raise (i went from 64 PSAT- 800 SAT within less than a year).</p>
<p>Don’t go through then passively. Rewrite the whole question and do it again. That way, you will ingrain the method in your brain </p>
<p>Troublesome I know but it’s only for a week and I guarentee it will raise your score and you will stop making the same mistakes again</p>