<p>I'm prepping for the SAT with the CollegeBoard's second edition of the Official SAT study guide. I've exhausted all material from the book, and many of the times I practice I seem to be familiar with the tests. This is significant because the practice is no longer helpful if I will know what the answer will be.</p>
<p>What do I do now? I've taken all the annual practice booklets sent out by the college board as well.</p>
<p>“many of the times I practice I seem to be familiar with the tests. This is significant because the practice is no longer helpful if I will know what the answer will be.”</p>
<p>Seriously though: don’t just keep taking the same tests! :)</p>
<p>If you’ve taken all the book’s tests, you may have prepared enough. If you feel that you may continue to improve, the only things left are to buy the previous edition of the book and take its unique tests or try a non-official test book. (Some, however, think the latter is counterproductive.)</p>
<p>You can’t buy past SATs’s. RH is referring to past PSAT’s for 3bucks a piece. you can get them at the collegeboard bookstore. Just go on google and type in Collegeboard bookstore.</p>
<p>why would it not do much good? It’s practice problems, unless you want to practice based on time-constraints, practice problems=good. And PSAT material is similiar to SAT material…</p>
<p>I agrree. I think doing practice problems is better than taking tests with time-constraints–you can pick apart the SAT’s when you approach the tests with the former method.</p>