<p>Tomorrow is the last day to register for the October SAT at regular cost. I got a 2100 on a practice test which I took without any previous SAT preparation. </p>
<p>I want a 2300+ score. Are the next three weeks enough for me to achieve this? I’ve had zero SAT prep thus far, but I have the materials I need to study. Should I try to cram and register for the October SAT or take more time studying and wait until the November/December test? </p>
<p>Is three weeks really enough time to master the SAT? </p>
<p>Master the SAT in three weeks? Absolutely not. Mastering the SAT is a long and painful journey that starts from Freshmen all the way to Junior. Is three weeks enough time to improve considerably? In the low score range, definitely. However, in your score range of 2100, maybe, by 80 points…tops…</p>
<p>Sorry to break it down to you bro, but it’s gonna take a lot more than three weeks to score in the 2300-2400 range. More like three months or so.</p>
<p>I disagree wth SirWanksalot.Yes, you can improve and reach the 2300+ in three weeks, but it is going to be one hell of a painful journey. Wake up 5 am then study from 6 am to 8 pm,and that way you will improve greatly.</p>
<p>Starting from 2100 is not a good indicator because this means you already know the content and there is nothing to do except practice.</p>
<p>Well if you put it that way, reality, he can definitely improve enormously if he studies from 6 AM to 8 PM in which he’ll have done about 3 SAT practice tests, and have left 2 hours in the end to understand all his mistakes. But this is humanly impossible, unless you’re a masochist. So most probably, I don’t think he can do it. Feel free to prove me wrong though, OP, and send me a photo of your SAT score on October 20th ;-)</p>
<p>Yes, completely. It can be done with ap tests, it can be done with the sat, it can be done with any test really. Half of it may be dedication, but it always comes back to intellectual capacity.</p>
<p>@trentgreene, absolutely not. The test may depend partially on intelligence, but the vast majority of those who do excel, do not as a result of intrinsic abilities but rather as a result of their determination and persistence.</p>
<p>So, I think he can improve, but with homework and school starting, I highly doubt. For me, I barely can study for 2 hours with AP and PreAP homework I have to do…</p>
<p>it depends on your capabilities weaknesses and strengths:
-Are you good at math ??
-Do you master tough vocabulary?
-Can you read a 850-word passage without losing concentration?</p>
<p>startong from that look fo materials and guides for tips and strategies and only then take some practise tests to see how you’ll score on your first practise tests::planning and patience+intelligence in working :::: can d o it??</p>
<p>Did you know that some people score 2300 on their first sit with only 1 week prep???
I for instance moved from 2000-2100 to 2300+ in one week??</p>
<p>To sum all of this uo;;;don’t take the words of those above me seriously and work smartly and you’ll achieve your goals!!!</p>
<p>Sir…alot, you’re right, the vast majority do earn good scores as a result of determination, but it very well can be done with a good deal of smarts. I know a student who studied for 2 days before the ap micro exam. Didn’t take the class, took macro (which helped), but hadn’t looked over a single concept or graph before those two days. He got a 4 on both exams. So, in relation to op, is it probable that he’ll boost his scores that high? No. Could he do it? Yep.</p>