<p>Try all the books published by Princeton Review.</p>
<p>Grubers is a good book that isn't as well known. They have an AMAZING vocab list that basically saved my *** on the SCs.</p>
<p>This is a little bit late for the seniors in the audience, but for juniors (and even sophomores...), take AP English and work hard in it. It's obviously not going to increase your math score any, but through AP English (usually Language in 11th grade, Lit in 12th) you'll gain a lot of experience with timed writing (albeit a greater time limit) and tackle much more difficult reading passages.</p>
<p>I got a 5 on the AP English exam, so I feel that I prepared well for it, and took the June SATs immediately following, bumping my CR to 800 (up 100 points from the March) and my writing to 750 (up 110 points from March).</p>
<p>blue book--practice tests made by college board</p>
<p>for CR, reading's your best solution. I have only gone up 150 points since freshman year; I should have read more. Some vocab won't hurt either.</p>
<p>For the others, just take practice tests..CollegeBoard ones. Remember, you're gunna be taking a CollegeBoard SAT, not TPR or Barron's or Kaplan's SAT..</p>
<p>DONT USE KAPLAN</p>
<p>I just bought the kaplan psat review book so that I could take some practice tests, and its horrible. The tests are extremely watered-down, there were NO tough vocab on the critical reading section, i finished a 25-minute math section withn 15 minutes (and im usually not even THAT quck at math). They make the tests easier so that when youre practicing youll feel as though you've improved a lot. I mean practice is practice, but I'm sure that the official collegeboard one or even princeton review is much better. Even though kaplan colors are prettier.</p>