Lets get a 2400

<p>I know is not realistic to get a 2400 on your third try, but tell me, How. I can get to 2000 or if possible higher.
I have a 1610 n my first time, 1620 n my second time.</p>

<p>Please tell me your secrets.
I’ve read countless of princetonreview books, taken free classes, and have the more than a general Understanding of what the SAT is all about. </p>

<p>I have 2 months of preparation, if someone can become my coach I’ll gladly appreciate.</p>

<p>If you’ll help me out, you will have become one of the greatest person I shall have met.</p>

<p>Have you tried the ACT? A lot of people do better on one test than the other, and it is possible that the ACT would be better suited towards your abilities.</p>

<p>Some people just aren’t capable of perfect scores, let’s face it. If you’re getting in the 1600 range, I’d say there’s like a 95% (maybe even higher) you aren’t getting a 2400.</p>

<p>^What CE said…</p>

<p>I know for math, I highly recommend that you review Algebra I and II and some of Geometry</p>

<p>What kind of questions do you usually get wrong?</p>

<p>Read all the books you want, they’re not going to help you. When my sister took it, she said it was 90% really repetitive practice and 10% memorizing rules and words (like grammar and vocab). </p>

<p>In two months you’re not going to get much accomplished. Just do tests. Compile a huge stack of full exams and take two or three a day. If you can. Mind you, it’s 4 hours per test. Time yourself. In no time people start to see that the questions are repeated and really similar. The SAT is nearly always a compilation of past questions. The more familiar you are with them, the better you will do. </p>

<p>Also it might be more helpful if you actually asked this and sought help in the SAT Prep section</p>

<p>There’s not much more you can do besides taking practice tests and reviewing your answers. And do you really need a ridiculous score that is way above your abilities? Suppose that you do get such a score and afterwards get accepted to a super elite university. Your classmates will be really smart - smart enough to get a good score without spending countless hours on SAT prep - and chances are you’ll be near the bottom in test scores and grades in your classes. It’s not going to be pleasant at all to work for hours and hours each day just to try to pass. Your test scores and GPA are good enough for a wide variety of universities - probably even most universities. Don’t worry.</p>