Anonymous wrote:We followed the US News guidelines with a semiprivate tutor and they said that in total, students should plan to spend 12-15 hours a week on prep starting six to eight weeks before they plan to take the final test. The study course should offer practice at least once a week for four weeks.
DS did it with his girlfriend and DS got a 1540. Girlfriend got a 1500.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We followed the US News guidelines with a semiprivate tutor and they said that in total, students should plan to spend 12-15 hours a week on prep starting six to eight weeks before they plan to take the final test. The study course should offer practice at least once a week for four weeks.
DS did it with his girlfriend and DS got a 1540. Girlfriend got a 1500.
Seriously? That seems like a lot of prep. I am curious if your ds did a practice test before starting prep and whether he noticed a noticeable improvement in his scores after studying for so long.
I am planning to have my ds take a practice test on the Khan academy website a few months before the test to see if he actually needs to prep. He did pretty well on the PSAT without any prep (I think his total was 1460). If he gets less than 1500 on the SAT practice test, we will consider prep. Not sure whether it makes sense to sign up for a time consuming class. I might consider hiring a tutor for 4-6 hours to give targeted advice if it is not too expensive. Still a year away from needing to make these decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Do your children have learning disabilities or did they go to public school?
Anonymous wrote:We followed the US News guidelines with a semiprivate tutor and they said that in total, students should plan to spend 12-15 hours a week on prep starting six to eight weeks before they plan to take the final test. The study course should offer practice at least once a week for four weeks.
DS did it with his girlfriend and DS got a 1540. Girlfriend got a 1500.
Anonymous wrote:Where are you? If in Northern VA, no one is better than Albert Silverman who teaches out of a commercial townhouse on Kilworth Lane in Springfield near TJ HS. Many TJ students go to him and his stated goal is for each of his students to be a National Merit Scholar and get 800s on each section. He was recommended by a friend whose child took the class and got a perfect score and is now at Stanford. My daughter actually enjoyed his twice a week classes and found them very worthwhile. She didn't get 800s but came very close.
Anonymous wrote:That seems like a lot. My kids had a private tutor once a week for one hour starting about three months before the test. However, they took quite a few full length practice tests on weekends that the tutor then went over with them the next day. So, every other week - a practice test - but you don't need to pay the tutor to administer the test.
I am also not sure why you would want semi-private lessons - seems like your son and his friend might have very different things they need to work on.