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I am going to be taking them soon...like in two to three months. How should I prepare for them?

2007-03-06 12:10:04 · 9 answers · asked by Kurious_Kat 3 in Education & Reference Standards & Testing

9 answers

What helped me the most was to buy the Princeton Review Student Manual and study from that. It has a lot of good tips regarding math and grammar- stuff you don't get anywhere else. Then study the vocab they give you because a lot of it DOES end up showing up on the SAT.

Then get the Princeton Review 11 Practice Tests Book and drill everyday. Do 1 section everyday for each category (CR, W, M) and check your answers. If you get something wrong, copy down the question in a notebook and go over them later until you can solve other problems like it.

Then, do a lot of reading. Read classics like Faulkner, Bradbury, etc. If you don't have time, go to sparknotes and spend some time looking up books and reading themes and plots. This helps a LOT for essays when you're trying to come up with examples.

Good luck!

2007-03-12 16:08:35 · answer #1 · answered by fire 1 · 0 0

the easiest SAT prep book i have read is called Up Your Score: The Underground Guide to the SAT. this book is written for a teenage audience and makes learning tips more fun and less tedious work and i was pleasantly surprised to find useful information in it. i definitely would use the practice questions at collegeboard.com and take a practice one online if you have time. improving your vocabulary will help as well. i always review basic geometry as well before the SAT because after years you forget some things that may pop up such as interior angles of a polygon. the new SAT has a writing section so i would encourage you to practice writing essays in the amount of time given (i believe you get a little over 20 minutes). i took the new one last year and found that i barely ran out of time. if i had organized my ideas more rapidly that would have helped. good luck.

2007-03-06 14:09:05 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Try to take some practice tests and then focus on your weak points or areas that you need additional help. You can also take review classes. Most communities offer them at a low cost.

2007-03-06 12:13:57 · answer #3 · answered by Stareyes 5 · 0 0

Buy the prep book. They help a lot actually. Those book help me when I was in high school a lot. They help me obtain a higher score than usual. I just practice with those prep book a lot

2007-03-06 12:14:07 · answer #4 · answered by Jason 4 · 0 0

The best way is to buy an SAT prep book/workbook. Practice practice practice and you will do great!

2007-03-06 12:14:06 · answer #5 · answered by fade_this_rally 7 · 0 0

Get books on the SATs, or enroll in SAT prep courses.

2007-03-06 12:13:15 · answer #6 · answered by chrisatmudd 4 · 0 0

go to collegeboard.com and take some practices and theyll send SAT questions of the day

2007-03-06 12:13:06 · answer #7 · answered by MS32291 4 · 0 0

This website is helpful.

http://www.number2.com/

2007-03-06 12:15:08 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm including both some book/internet resources and my own tips for taking the SAT.

Books:
The Official SAT Study Guide
by The College Board
Price: $11.97 on Amazon.com
This is the book I used to study for the November SAT. It has some marginally helpful chapters with test-taking tips, as well as 8 full-length tests and scoring guides. At the very least, it can give you idea of where you stand right now and provide some extremely helpful practice.

Cracking the SAT
by Princeton Review
Price: $13.97 on Amazon.com
I have some friends who used this book, and found it fairly useful. However, it's more expensive than the College Board book, and includes only 4 practice tests (plus one online) as opposed to 8. Since I feel that the practice tests are the most important parts of a study guide, I wouldn't recommend this one over another, less expensive book with more tests.

11 Practice Tests for the SAT and PSAT
by Princeton Review
Price: $12.57 on Amazon.com
This is a pretty good deal -- 11 tests for just under 13 dollars. It doesn't include "tips" sections like the previous two, but again, the practice tests are really the most important study aid. Practice makes perfect when it comes to the SAT! If you're willing to spend the extra money, you might buy the College Board study guide (the first one I listed) AND this one, so you have the College Board tips plus 18 practice tests total (one of the eleven in this book is a PSAT test, so I'm not counting that one).

I wouldn't waste your money on the books that include DVDs, tempting as they may be (for example, Princeton Review offers its study guide both with and without an accompanying DVD). The people I know who have purchased these have said that the DVDs don't really offer much useful help beyond that which is in the book.

My recommendation? If you want tips, go with the College Board book. If you want mainly practice, go with the 11-test book from Princeton Review. If you're willing to spend about $25, get both!

Internet Resources:
http://collegeboard.com/student/testing/...
Price: Free!
College Board provides an "SAT Question of the Day" and sample essays...it can be pretty helpful, and it's free!

https://satonlinecourse.collegeboard.com...
Price: $69.95 for four months
An online course, with a little more personalization, but I'm not really sure it's worth it if you already have a text study guide. Also, it looks as though you don't have this kind of time. You might look into it if you retake the test, but again, I wouldn't really recommend it. It looks mostly like a waste of money.

http://www.princetonreview.com/college/t...
Price: ?
Here, you can find tutors in your area. The prices vary. I had a little tutoring myself before the SAT, but I would hesitate to hire someone I didn't know beforehand (mine happened to live next door, so I could trust her and she didn't charge me too much), because these lessons are pretty expensive. I wouldn't take this jump unless you already have a pretty good idea of your score range and know where you need to improve, and whether it's worth this expensive move.

http://www.princetonreview.com/college/t...
Price: $1500 per student
This is an EXPENSIVE move, especially since you'd be learning with other students! My goodness! You can probably take a similar class at your high school for closer to $80. But, for the sake of being thorough, I'm including it -- NOT recommending it!

http://www.princetonreview.com/college/t...
Price: ?
There's no price listed for this one; I gather it's like the small group instruction, but with a bigger class size. Probably not worth it, if your school offers a similar program.

http://www.princetonreview.com/college/t...
Price: $99-$699
These online classes probably aren't worth it, unless you really have an idea of what you need to improve. I can't imagine spending $699 on an online SAT class, and the ExpressOnline course only offers two practice tests! Not worth it, if you can just buy a book.

http://www.princetonreview.com/college/t...
Price: ?
More tutoring, but this time not in person. This is just awkward. I wouldn't take this route.

Just for fun, here's my personal tips for the SAT, copy-pasted from another question I answered. Use them or ignore them, whichever you like!

"On the essay:
I don't know if you've ever taken the SAT before. I'll assume you haven't.
For the essay, you'll be given a quote, and then a question related to this quote. You can find sample essay prompts online, like at collegeboard.com. Practice writing answers to a few of these prompts: TIME YOURSELF. Don't give yourself any more time than you'd have on the actual test.
A few tips on the essay:
The graders really like to see the paper full; try not to write only a half page and turn that in. Fill up the space if you can, without being overly redundant.
Choose 2 or 3 (three is preferable) examples to support your assertion. These examples can be from personal experience (although you should try not to use this for more than one of your examples), current events, literature (in my experience, Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card works for almost every essay...weird, but true!), technology, history, etc. Find a way to connect your examples to your thesis, even if you have to make it up. Remember, you have less than a half hour for this section, so don't dwell on brainstorming! Get writing!

Multiple choice:
You can find sample tests online, at websites like collegeboard.com and princetonreview.com. It also helps, if you're willing to make the investment, to buy a book of practice tests -- these include both the multiple choice sections and sample essays. Practicing with tests like these can be a huge help!

Tips on specific sections:

Critical reading:
If you feel like you often run out of time in this section, don't read the entire passage, getting bogged down, and then try to answer the questions. I approach passages this way:

First, I read the blurb in italics that describes the passage, so I know what the text is about. Next, I go immediately to the questions. I read the first question, then go and read the lines that the question is about. These are generally in order, so it works well! You may have to read a few lines before and after the lines in question for context. Also, any "general" questions about the whole passage you should save for after you've answered all the others. Once you've gone through all the specific questions, you should have pretty much read every line of the text, and you'll be able to answer the overarching questions better -- in much less time than if you'd read the essay first and then tried to answer the questions!

As for preparation, try to expand your vocabulary. Buy a book to help with this, study some common Latin and Greek roots, and/or just read! Reading some higher-level works can really improve this area of your schema!

Writing/Sentence Revisions:
Again, practice makes perfect. Take practice tests.

To prepare, read some grammar guides, study general grammatical rules. Learn how sentences should be structured.

When taking the test, remember:
The SAT always prefers active voice to passive voice.
The SAT prefers conciseness to wordiness -- i.e., if two answers are similar, but one is simpler and shorter, it's probably the right one.
Watch for subject-verb agreement and other consistency issues.
If you read a sentence over and over and nothing wrong really jumps out at you, it's probably correct. Don't second-guess yourself and really search for something wrong if you're pretty confident it's okay.

Math:
The main thing here is practice. Take a practice test or two and look at where your weaknesses are. Do you have problems with geometric calculations, like area and circumference and volume? Practice those more! Do you have trouble with patterns? Focus on those types of questions! Find your weak spots and improve them!"

Hope my suggestions and testing tips have helped, even just a little!

2007-03-12 02:47:01 · answer #9 · answered by lydia 2 · 1 0

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