We’ll give you the best strategies to use to ace the test, but you have to keep in mind that knowing them is just the first step in being able to employ them. So you have to practice really really hard using those strategies in order to perfect them.
We’ll give you the best advice on how to ace the test not only question wise, but also overall prep and study time and tips.
We’ll provide you with dozens of real official practice tests that you can practice strategies on, or break them down and classify the skills of each question to hone your weaknesses.
You’ll need the best strategies that are and were used by people who scored in the 99th percentile. You don’t have to worry anymore because we have all these strategies and we give them out for free, because we believe everybody should have access to those and be equal.
Access our strategiesAt the beginning of your SAT prep as a noob, you’ll need to practice on like 10 tests in each SAT subject using the strategies we gave you, and making sure you review each answer you got incorrectly. Make sure from the 10 tests, you solve 2-4 tests in practice mode where you're checking the answer after you solve the question directly, not quiz mode. This will help make the SAT thinking clearer when you try to figure out how the answer came. If you don’t figure out the reason of the answer using all of the strategies, then look it up immediately by googling the words of the question. When you finish the 10 full tests (30 by subject). You can start classifying the questions of the subject you’re weakest at. We’ll publish a classifying guide for you to follow. Then start attempting those questions from all the tests you could classify, you could scan them and print them. Solve the weaker skills of each subject to hone them on a regular basis (3-7 days separate). If you keep on this you’ll eventually master all the SAT skills. 1 week before your real test, start taking full 4 hour tests in 1 sitting with breaks like the real test if you want perfect simulation. Score those tests, review mistakes and know to which skills they belong.
access the practice testsNo matter what schedule you attempt to create, make sure you’re putting in at least 5 hours of study time per week for SAT study. You can dissect the test to math day, reading day, writing day. In the first phase your workload should be extra because you're getting the SAT game for the first time and figuring out the test’s secrets using strategies and techniques and more importantly employing them, and knowing that they work. By practicing questions keeping the strategies of each subject in mind, you’ll be very competent in recalling any strategy as soon as you read the question. In the middle phase you should be practicing like an hour everyday on specific skill sets, if you already have a book that has official tests classified then that’s a lot of time saved, but make sure it’s classified the way we mentioned, otherwise you’d be just practicing questions that are missing the main common thing, the specific skill, because you don’t just want to practice 1000 questions about solid geometry when your only weak skill is volume. You won’t increase a bit because you’re still not targeting a specific skill, you’re just targeting a general math topic tested. In the last phase before your test day where you put the scores you received at home practicing to real life, you need to be simulating the test day and training yourself not to crash by the 6th or 7th section where most students do. You want to be able to perform on the full test just as good as you do on separate timed sections.
The night before your test day, make sure you have everything ready for the morning. You’re going to need your passport or ID, your admission ticket, pencils (2 is enough but you might need a sharpener), soft eraser, watch (optional), snacks for the breaks (google healthy sat snacks), gum (optional for stress). The night before your SAT starting from 12 PM (afternoon) you need to completely relax and get your mind off the SAT, basically do anything but SAT prep, and try not to exercise too hard and strain yourself and get annoying sore muscles on test day. Get a healthy wholesome dinner on the night before the test, and in the morning before going to the test centre. Try to wear comfortable clothes, but don’t overdo it going with pajamas you won’t look approachable and might just end up depressed and stressed the whole time not finding anybody to talk to. Keep it balanced comfortable and nice. Don’t wear new colognes or try out new things on test day because that will just make you uncomfortable, feeling that there's something unusual, which with time and test pressure will make you extremely stressed out and totally drained.
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