Anonymous wrote:"Highly paid tutors make bold claims about how much they can raise SAT scores (“my students routinely improve their scores by more than 400 points”), but there is no peer-reviewed scientific evidence that coaching can reliably provide more than a modest boost — especially once simple practice effects and other expected improvements from retaking a test are accounted for."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/no-one-likes-the-sat-its-still-the-fairest-thing-about-admissions/2019/03/22/5fa67a16-4c00-11e9-b79a-961983b7e0cd_story.html
Anonymous wrote:I am not usually like this, but on the advice of a friend hired one of the fancy, one-on-one prep services for both of my kids, and ended up paying about $3,000 each. It felt like a dumb expense and a stupid waste of money.
But in the end, one kid went from 85th percentile on PSAT to 96th percentile on SAT, and the other went from 82nd percentile to 92nd percentile.
It made a big difference in the category of schools they could shoot for, and the schools that would potentially offer them merit money. So in the end, I think it was money well spent.
Anonymous wrote:Spending the $1k is possible yet will be felt in budget.
So, I’m wondering how necessary is this prep? My kid is likely to benefit from the external motivation to study through a teacher as opposed to studying on their own with Khan Academy. Technically, I think it would work better to have them take a class.
Yet I read that the increase in score is modest, so is it worth $1k?
As background, kid took PSAT and scored 1150, which I think equates to 1300-something on SAT. Strong writer with good vocabulary. Slightly anxious test taker. 3.9 GPA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spending the $1k is possible yet will be felt in budget.
So, I’m wondering how necessary is this prep? My kid is likely to benefit from the external motivation to study through a teacher as opposed to studying on their own with Khan Academy. Technically, I think it would work better to have them take a class.
Yet I read that the increase in score is modest, so is it worth $1k?
As background, kid took PSAT and scored 1150, which I think equates to 1300-something on SAT. Strong writer with good vocabulary. Slightly anxious test taker. 3.9 GPA.
What grade are they in now? Asking because of PSAT score. Was this the 11th grade score?
Anonymous wrote:Spending the $1k is possible yet will be felt in budget.
So, I’m wondering how necessary is this prep? My kid is likely to benefit from the external motivation to study through a teacher as opposed to studying on their own with Khan Academy. Technically, I think it would work better to have them take a class.
Yet I read that the increase in score is modest, so is it worth $1k?
As background, kid took PSAT and scored 1150, which I think equates to 1300-something on SAT. Strong writer with good vocabulary. Slightly anxious test taker. 3.9 GPA.