Which one for math?

<p>I am at around 600 math and am someone who is shaky with some of the topics. I have access to all three (two from library and one from internet) math books which are revered around here, the Grubers M Workbook, PWN The SAT and Dr. Chungs. If I want to carry myself to 750 over the summer, which is understanding and solidifying all the topics in my head while getting proficient with all types of problems.</p>

<p>I know Dr. Chungs is very difficult and skips many steps, I am certainly afraid of this.</p>

<p>What are your experiences with Chungs and the other two books. I know the Blue Book is essential. But I want to understand every type of problem.</p>

<p>Please understand that I also have a limited time and I commited 2/3rds of a month fully on aggressive math before studying CR+W, and then doing practice tests with all</p>

<p>What is your greatest difficulty with math? Do you not know how to solve the problems? Do you run out of time? Do you get caught by small mistakes?</p>

<p>If you have all of those books, I don’t think that finding ANOTHER guide will do you much good. Instead, you should focus on practice. Take the time to work through every math problem, regardless of the time it takes if you are having trouble solving the problem. If time or small mistakes is the problem, that practice makes perfect. Finally, be sure to always review the questions you missed so you don’t make the same mistake twice.</p>

<p>I have access to them, I did not actually even opened them. I have a thorough summer plan however I am not sure which book to focus. Right now I am bogged down with AP Tests and work, but hopefully in the summer I will be much less busy. I understand that I have to target my mistakes, but I want to build a very solid foundation which propelling ahead in terms of score, I just wanted to know which is the best. I have forgotten some early general algebra skills and even geometry principles. The best review + tips on every sat problem is what I want.</p>