<p>You guys all beat me to it. I was going to say (before I scrolled down)</p>
<p>"you will definately do good"
You obviously won't do well, you probably will fail the writing section. </p>
<p>Lol - We all just caught that cause we're SAT Nerds and taht's the kind stuff we do.</p>
<p>Memorizing 2k words is a lot of work. Why can't you cut that in half or 1/4 and then memorize root words? It seems to me that they don't usually have answers like
A) bibliography
B) bibliophile
C) avocate
D) vocation</p>
<p>Maybe I'm just lazy. I'm sure your plan works, but... phew!</p>
<p>
[quote]
Maybe you should just pick out the words that you don't know and record them onto notecards or a notebook
[/quote]
That's exactly what I've been doing actually. It's all part of the concept where you want to "understand" how the question would be answered, and hence you kinda have to know the vocab, so I write the ones that I'm completely unfamiliar with and look them up. killaerone i think Hill is honestly the best after blue book, on the 2nd page on Snake24's "Which SAT Prep Book" thread, syn also has a good review.</p>
<p>Anyone know where I can find the 3 sat tests online? I googled it but came up with nothing that was a "real test".</p>
<p>You have to buy the official SAT online course to get the 3 additional "real" practice SAT's made by them.</p>
<p>How much does that cost?</p>
<p>I think it's 70 bucks or something like that... 60 if you own their book. It has 3 additional "real" practice tests, answers and explanations for all 8 tests in their book, their 3 additional online practice tests, and also for the additional quizzes. Basically, it gives 3 tests that aren't avalible anywhere else and a TON of practice quizzes, and explanations for everything they've ever made... It's a good deal... Well, I think it is anyway.</p>
<p>Sparknotes has good practice. And Rocket Review is good with essays.</p>