<p>It's very interesting to see here a lot of contradictory opinions as which method is to use. Xiggi method vs Mystery tutor vs 2400 tips from masochist and test prep companies. Which plan work for you? (as they are really opposite I'm curious to know)</p>
<p>All I did was the 8 BB tests, only going over the questions I got wrong or was uncertain about (not all of them, like xiggi and others suggest). My scores are pending, but I felt very confident during the tests and am expecting 2300+.</p>
<p>There is no best method for everyone. Personally, working through the BB tests and carefully training my thinking was the best plan for me. This might be different for other people however.</p>
<p>Hi,
I just want to see what work the most . Please also list your realscore. Thanks</p>
<p>I think the Xiggi method works fine. But I modified it like 112358 (Fibonacci huh?) and went through the explanations of the questions I got wrong AND the ones I had to guess, or wasn’t confident of.</p>
<p>Score - surprisingly bad -
CR 750
M 680 (I am not living up to the Asian math stereotype)
WR 690</p>
<p>But I had a bad test day - I went through sections 1-4 needing to go to the bathroom REALLY badly and that just messed me up, I was hitting 2300+ in BB practice tests.</p>
<p>One more thing, if you still have time before your SATs like 8 months+ , read books and not for prepping but from the enjoyment that comes from reading. That what pushed up my CR score even in those dire straits :)</p>
<p>What are the “BB” tests? thanks</p>
<p>lazy man’s strat:</p>
<p>take test #1 cold (2130) and see what you need to work on for test #2 (9-10 days till)</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>The Blue Book tests, the tests from the official College Board guide.</p>