<p>I'm shooting for a 2250, ideally a 2300. If I took the test cold right now (I haven't really studied apart for a Princeton Review prep class in the summer that proved to be a waste of time), I'm confident I could score a 2100 (1910 in 8th grade, 211 PSAT), but I want to attain those last elusive points. I already have The Official SAT Study Guide (Two copies, in fact), Princeton Review's Beat the SAT, and a 2002 AMSCO Preparing for the SAT I Verbal.<br>
Now, I have heard Barron's is a good option, but if that is the one you recommend, which one should I purchase? Barron's SAT? Barron's SAT w/ CD? Barron's SAT 2400?
Also, should I even bother to use that AMSCO book for verbal? I know the test has been overhauled since then, but I assume the vocab and the passages would be similar to the ones now.</p>
<p>if you absolutely have to get a non-collegeboard book, and you're shooting for high scores, then barrons 2400 is the way to go. but seriously, numerous 2400-ers on these boards have proven that it's CB material ftw.</p>
<p>it's all about the practice tests. just take more and more of them, and see how you score. there's no other way. and go over every single question you got wrong and learn more on that area before you take the next test. over and over.</p>
<p>grubers for math is really good. haha</p>
<p>What should I do about the AMSCO book, then?</p>