Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd recommend you find out whether she prefers SAT or ACT first before developing a path forward plan. You can easily do it from home if she is willing to commit a few hours.
Agree with the above poster. My DC did the CE course and in hindsight, I'd have to give them a neutral rating. It helped, mostly by providing a structure, but I think that a private tutor was more effective in my DC's case by zeroing in on areas that needed the most help . If we had to do it over again, I'd determine ACT v. SAT first, then do some practice tests in a test-like environment to set baselines, self study, more practice tests, then go with some one-on-one tutoring (if necessary), and your DC can do most of the work on her own (and save you some major $). Also know that their scores naturally increase with time, which is why so many seniors take the OCT test of their senior year.
Anonymous wrote:
I'd recommend you find out whether she prefers SAT or ACT first before developing a path forward plan. You can easily do it from home if she is willing to commit a few hours.
Anonymous wrote:
I'd recommend you find out whether she prefers SAT or ACT first before developing a path forward plan. You can easily do it from home if she is willing to commit a few hours.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have gotten many things from Capital Educators in the mail so it's good to know that they are not all marketing hype. What I really do think she needs is guidance as to which test fits her skills well so I'm inclined to give them a call and see what they have to say, especially after hearing you say you've had good experience with them.
She is not signed up for any test yet - though she took a few subject tests last year to practice. I was thinking she might try the original SAT this year (late fall) to see how she does and could just throw it out if she isn't happy with the results.
Also happy to hear from others about tutoring in case she tries Capital and the fit isn't great for her.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have gotten many things from Capital Educators in the mail so it's good to know that they are not all marketing hype. What I really do think she needs is guidance as to which test fits her skills well so I'm inclined to give them a call and see what they have to say, especially after hearing you say you've had good experience with them.
She is not signed up for any test yet - though she took a few subject tests last year to practice. I was thinking she might try the original SAT this year (late fall) to see how she does and could just throw it out if she isn't happy with the results.
Also happy to hear from others about tutoring in case she tries Capital and the fit isn't great for her.