Sunday, June 28, 2020
Top Tips to Help Improve Your SAT Score
When youââ¬â¢re prepping for the SAT, the last thing you want to do is waste time. And there are a lot of time wasters out there: from bad materials to tutors only familiar with the old test (it changed in 2016, people!), it seems like there are more potential landmines cropping up every day. But donââ¬â¢t lose hope! Doing some research before you start actually studying will pay big dividends in terms of your score down the line. In particular, youââ¬â¢ll want to establish three things before you start: what and who youââ¬â¢re working withââ¬âand how youââ¬â¢re working with them. 1. What Youââ¬â¢re Working With There are a lot of great, official materials out there; by all means, you should start with them. These include eight practice tests at the College Board website and a variety of practice problems (and many more resources) at Khan Academy, which partnered with the College Board to create solid, accessible materials. And this is all fantastic. However, itââ¬â¢s also overwhelming. Can you learn the exact content that youââ¬â¢ll see on test day by taking SAT practice tests? Sureââ¬âbut youââ¬â¢ll have to take a lot of them, and youââ¬â¢ll have to spend a huge amount of time breaking them down. Make it easy on yourself and get a solid SAT study guide that you can work with, right from the start. No matter what Amazon tells you, you do not need to spend $100 on the fanciest guide money can buy; Magoosh has a free eBook guide that tells you everything you need to know. 2. Who Youââ¬â¢re Working With Getting a tutor (online or in-person) or taking a class (again, online or in-person) can help a lot of students compress a lot of SAT study time into, well, less SAT study time. Having a good coach can help you see what youââ¬â¢re missing when problems give you trouble or you score lower than youââ¬â¢d like on a practice test. Before hiring someone, make sure to get recommendations from other students and find out as much about the tutor or schoolââ¬â¢s track record as you can. Remember, too, that just because someone scored high on the SAT themselves, they may not necessarily be a good tutor (although it should be a prerequisite!) Finally, be sure you actually need a tutorââ¬âit may turn out that all you need to succeed is an SAT one month study plan. It all depends on your internal motivation. 3. How Youââ¬â¢re Working This takes us back to all those great materials we were talking about earlier. If your plan is just to take practice test after practice test, youââ¬â¢ll find yourself hitting a wall pretty quickly. Imagine if your plan for your driving test was just to keep going back and taking the exam until you passed, without practicing in-between. Is it possible to pass that way? Sure. Is it efficient? Uh-uh. The best way to approach SAT study is to take a diagnostic exam to get a sense of where you are right now. And yes, you should take an SAT practice test each week to make sure your prep is working for you. In the meantime, though, what should you do? Read a study guide. Take lessonsââ¬âvideo lessons, classes, in a bookââ¬âup to you. And always, always spend at least as much time analyzing your practice tests as you do taking themââ¬âyouââ¬â¢ll be amazed at the patterns you start to spot. By setting yourself up for success from the beginning of your SAT prep, youââ¬â¢ll give yourself the best shot to get your dream score on test day. Good luck! Rachel Kapelke-Dale is a High School and Graduate Exams blogger at Magoosh. She has a Bachelor of Arts from Brown University, an MA from the Università © de Paris VII, and a PhD from University College London. She has taught test preparation and consulted on admissions practices for over eight years. Currently, Rachel divides her time between the US and London. Related Resources: â⬠¢ The Quick Guide to Admissions Resumes â⬠¢ Affordable Online Test Prep, a podcast episode â⬠¢ The SAT Essay: A Breakdown
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