<p>I have Kaplan, PR, & Red Book.</p>
<p>I have found that PR is the best for English (score increase from 31 to 34), and Sparknotes is the best for Reading (it’s online, and my score increased from 25 to 30).</p>
<p>I scored a 23 on Science in February & April. So, I definitely need to improve on Science (28+). But, once again, what’s the best book for the Science section?</p>
<p>I’m shooting for a 28 minimum, but considering how well I’m progressing…a 30 is now what I’m shooting for (26 in February =/ ).</p>
<p>I do usually okay on the science sec. There is, I don’t think anyways, no way to prepare for the science sections on prep books. I would just go and look and do thousands of practice tests. Make sure you have an answer key and figure out why you got it wrong. Science section tests not what you know, but how you INTERPRET it, it’s like trying to predict the weather with the past 5 days of weather before. Like many suggests on the CC forum, go straight to the question(except for conflicting viewpoint), and then look at the charts and graphs to answer the question. Sometimes there’s a question that says like what is the main goal or stuff about this experiment, and once you answer the easy questions about interpreting the graphs, you should naturally (probably) just know the answer right away. If not, scan the passage quickly until you find the answer to your question.</p>
<p>For the conflicting viewpoint section, you have to treat it as a reading section. It’s basically like the ones where it gives you the info on the charts and graphs, but instead of charts, you get words. All you have to do is try to find out (usually) what is the difference between the viewpoints, what they would agree/disagree, and the results of the final test. As long as you can at least try to predict the future, you’ll be fine.</p>
<p>Good luck</p>
<p>PR’s first science test just raped me.</p>
<p>Good god.</p>