<p>Hello. Famous SAT prep book brands are Princeton Review, Barron’s, Kaplan’s, McGraw Hill’s, Rocket Review Revolution, REA’s, and Gruber’s. Do I can use all of their SAT prep books in sequence (like use two prep books each time) and study each of them one by one?? Is it good to do that?</p>
<p>i highly doubt u will have the time to go over all of them</p>
<p>I would suggest using only one or two books and thoroughly studying them. Take a practice test every week up to your SAT and make sure you understand why you missed a certain question. Was it a grammar rule you previously did not know? Did you make a careless error? Or did you not know enough vocabulary? This will help you focus your study and identify your strengths and weaknesses.</p>
<p>I would only use college board made material. But that’s just me, others have found other prep tests to work.</p>
<p>I would suggest you go to your local library and skim all of these books. You might find that one of them works much better, or makes much more sense, than the others. If so, first buy/concentrate on those books.</p>
<p>If they’re all virtually the same, just buy the cheapest and/or the one with the most practice tests. I found taking practice tests to be the best study tool (and basically all I did)</p>
<p>Do whatever you think will help you. Some people recommend that you only use CollegeBoard material, but there’s absolutely nothing wrong with using other material as well. Although Princeton and Kaplan don’t have bona fide SAT practice tests, they are close enough that you’ll be able to apply what you learn from doing those on the real SAT.</p>