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View Poll Results: Have you taken, or do you plan to take, a paid SAT or ACT test prep course? | |
I have already taken (or am now taking) an ONLINE paid prep course.
|    | 18 | 3.51% | |
I have already taken (or am now taking) an IN PERSON paid prep course.
|    | 143 | 27.88% | |
I plan to take an ONLINE paid prep course in the future.
|    | 9 | 1.75% | |
I plan to take an IN PERSON paid prep course in the future.
|    | 35 | 6.82% | |
I'm using only self-prep methods (books, free tools, self-study, etc.)
|    | 305 | 59.45% | |
No, my schools of interest don't require the SAT or ACT.
|    | 3 | 0.58% |
06-19-2012, 03:02 PM
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#1 | | Administrator
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 6,079
| CC Poll: Taking an SAT/ACT Prep Course?
Have you taken, or do you plan to take, a paid SAT or ACT test prep course? Parent members - feel free to answer for your kid(s) if they are not posting here on their own.
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06-19-2012, 05:37 PM
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#2 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 108
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Nah, I wish. I'm doing self-prep. I can't afford any prep courses.
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06-19-2012, 05:55 PM
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#3 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: MA
Posts: 138
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@above; Ditto, though I already took my SAT. Couldn't afford any books either, so I did the Question of the Day and whatever free prep the College Board offered. Got a 1920, so I think I did okay.
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06-19-2012, 06:43 PM
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#4 | | New Member
Join Date: Jun 2012 Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 11
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All you need to do well on the SAT is motivation to self-study. All this requires is some of the study guides and/or workbooks. A SAT tutor is just an unneeded luxury.
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06-19-2012, 07:02 PM
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#5 | | Member
Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: Alaska-->Princeton '17
Posts: 529
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I did self prep out of the blue book and got a 2360.
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06-19-2012, 07:33 PM
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#6 | | Member
Join Date: Jun 2010 Location: UCLA
Posts: 862
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There is absolutely no reason to take a prep course unless you feel like you can't score a 1700. If you have a strong enough base to score 200-300 above the national average, you have the intelligence and knowledge base to be able to get your score up to ~2300 solely on self prep. The test isn't that demanding, and some of the prep books are absolutely excellent. There is no reason to take prep courses unless you feel like your character/determination about doing well on these tests is suspect.
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06-19-2012, 08:39 PM
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#7 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: Countryville (OK)
Posts: 2,120
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^Everyone learns different. Some people learn with human interaction. There is nothing wrong with that.
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06-19-2012, 10:08 PM
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#8 | | Member
Join Date: Mar 2011 Location: San Francisco
Posts: 398
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For most people, the best test prep courses will only raise their scores 200-300 points, tops. And some simply do well on standardized tests. I bought 3 SAT books. I've only done one test out of the BB, read the math refresher in Gruber's SAT, and din't even open my Barron's SAT 2400. And I scored 2280 on my first try.
So no, none of these options really apply to me all that well.
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06-19-2012, 10:25 PM
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#9 | | Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 420
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I don't think prep courses are necessary. I looked at Collegeboard's, and it costs around 80 dollars... I'm prepping using the big blue book and a couple of others, and I think that's going to be sufficient.
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06-19-2012, 11:12 PM
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#10 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 167
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Prep courses are way too expensive
self study ftw
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06-20-2012, 01:24 AM
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#11 | | Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 702
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DD14 is using the BB and began using the SAT online course a few months back... she is also using another free website which she says is great.
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06-20-2012, 10:41 AM
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#12 | | New Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 27
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I'm going into 11th grade, taken the SAT 3 times, and my highest score has been a 1790 combined. I'm still taking SAT Prep though, mostly for the sake of doing well on the NMSQT... Anyway, I'm trying to get into UVa OOS, so 1790 probably won't cut it. I need a solid score in the 2000-2400s, so SAT prep may be particularly useful, even though its taking up a semester of my elective classes. Don't criticize me for it, please...
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06-20-2012, 12:04 PM
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#13 | | New Member
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 17
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I lined up a private SAT/ACT tutor for my son the week of Spring Break. He wasn't thrilled to spend his Spring Break preparing for the SAT and ACT but did the work. He scored much better than either of us expected actually raising his SAT scores by 400 points. For us it was well worth the investment in time and money. That said, he would not have prepared much all on his own which I'm sure some students do and it works very well for them.
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06-20-2012, 12:41 PM
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#14 | | Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 369
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Took the ACT for the first time with no prep, scored a 30. Did self-prep with ACT 36 and a book of practice exams, about 10 hrs prep total, scored a 34.
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06-20-2012, 02:08 PM
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#15 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: Himmel
Posts: 2,071
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Originally Posted by ZombieDante Everyone learns different. Some people learn with human interaction. There is nothing wrong with that. | First, it's everyone learns differently because you need an adverb to modify a verb.
Second, the only thing I wish to learn through human interaction is the human anatomy.
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