<p>ok so ive done all the practice tests in the BB and i want to stick to real SAT questions so what can i do now? my average scores are 600-CR 780M 650W. how can i improve? Should i go back and do the 8 tests over again seeing as how i did the first coupe 4 months ago?</p>
<p>No; you'll subconsciously know the answers. Buy, like, PR's book of tests or Kaplan's. They're not real, but you probably haven't seen the questions before.</p>
<p>College board also provides 6 more official tests on their Online Course. Its about $60-$70 for four months. The Online Course provides answers, essay questions, and 600+ review questions.</p>
<p>Focus on the questions you got wrong. Know why, and what to work on. It's probably not a good idea to do it all over again.</p>
<p>It's good to stick to real SAT questions, because they have actual standards to them other SAT questions may not. The SAT is a highly standardized exam. Have you noticed any patterns in the answers while doing all of the practice exams? That will help you. For the standards on every section and patterns, mysterytutor.com has free explanations and his complimentary website mysterytutorvault.com has comprehensive explanations to every test question in the college board book.</p>
<p>If you decide upon the Online Course (discount if you have the book), you can use them together.</p>
<p>How helpful is the Online Course?</p>
<p>Is it worth the money?? Or am I better off just using my BB and getting an used copy of the 10 Real SAT book?</p>
<p>Its 6 more "real" tests and many review questions on each topic. It depends on you if it will really help. I am almost out of BB tests so I might get it for more practice.</p>
<p>hardcore memorize spark notes list of 1000 sat words. I guarantee it will save you one or two questions or CR Sentence completion.</p>
<p>No, no! It's bad to memorize 1000 words for two questions. The words on the test are not standardized, so it's better to focus on something else and use time more efficiently.</p>
<p>Instead, try to find the meanings of words without actually knowing the definition, by prefixes and suffixes, related words, etc. If the SAT was a vocab test, they would simply ask you "what does dogmatic mean? a,b,c,d,e" but there's a separate element to it, reasoning. It's also shown that even if you know all of the words, you can still answer it incorrectly, as well. So it's better to not approach it like a vocab exam. </p>
<p>It's sad, because many people are sucked into memorization (which is questionably reliable itself haha...1000 words: don't mix them up!). Even I was, until realizing that much. Again, another reason why mysterytutor.com saved my life...</p>