<p>There are 3 weeks to the SAT left... I am scoring 1800 consistently, but cannot seem to move it up to at least a 2000. I have to go to a good university
I have no school, so will be able to study all day for the next 3 weeks.
This is the first time I am taking it... would there be any efficient way I can improve it?</p>
<p>Well from a 1800 to a 2000 is a pretty big jump for 3 weeks. I am not saying its impossible but it seems very unlikely to cram that much information in your brain for 3 weeks.</p>
<p>If you want a few free chapters of my SAT Math strategy book send me a pm. If you’re unfamiliar with some of these strategies, then you might get a quick boost in your math score.</p>
<p>200 points in just 3 weeks is a lot but not impossible. I generally recommend only practicing for the SAT for a short amount of time each day, but you’ll need to study a bit more since there’s such a short time frame. Just try to study smarter, not harder. Make sure you’re practicing SAT specific strategies as you do problems, focus on the difficulty level of problems that’s going to raise your score. For example, if your Math score is currently a 600, focus mostly on Level 4 problems (do SOME problems of other levels, but Level 4 should be your main focus).</p>
<p>Best of luck!</p>
<p>Well, I aim for a 2000 too…but I currently score 2000s on practice tests.</p>
<p>Here what I suggest to do:</p>
<p>1) Memorize Spark Notes 1000 Common SAT words
2) Do some math review.
3) Review grammar.
4) Practice.</p>
<p>[Improve</a> Your SAT Scores with the SAT Skills Insight](<a href=“http://sat.collegeboard.com/practice/sat-skills-insight]Improve”>http://sat.collegeboard.com/practice/sat-skills-insight)</p>
<p>DO THIS^^ </p>
<p>It helped me go up 100 points in math alone. Start with the skill set in one score range below what you are scoring now on practice tests, and make sure you do each problem and understand why the answer is what it is. I suggest you dedicate an entire notebook to it, and write it out neatly and review it each day.</p>
<p>Yes, I believe that studying smarter will be more effective than studying harder. I currently have the Grubber’s SAT guide book and I studied all the rules of grammar from it today. Would studying the roots of words be more effective than memorizing SAT words or even 1000 most common SAT words? </p>
<p>I will definitely take a look at the website mentioned above. Increasing 100 points from 650 in Maths would help A LOT itself! Thanks!</p>
<p>
Myth. While roots and word parts can help you to understand the meaning of the particular word, nothing can replace solid vocabulary base. So study Spark Notes and don’t look around.</p>
<p>Weirdest thing happened, after studying strategies for awhile… I was able to score 660 + 660 + 680 making that a 2000. But it may just be because the reading passage this time were easier and I was very focused!</p>