Anonymous wrote:120 points. I am surprised no one has stated the obvious!
Anonymous wrote:My kid went from a 1430 to a 1560 with zero prep either time, but they definitely had under perfromed the first time relative to their PSAT scores.
I think if your kid's PSAT predicts higher than the 1430 that they don't really need more prep to get a higher score, just try it again.
Anonymous wrote:1:1 tutoring. Group class may not help as they are missing few questions. Practice! Practice!! Practice!!!. Also, look at the score to see where the empty bars are. It is the area of development.
Anonymous wrote:1410 is DS's first SAT score.
He is g11, with all A and 1 B+ in all AP classes
Anonymous wrote:Has he mastered demos? A calc bc kid may be able to get to 780 or so on the Math. Can he nail all the grammar rules? If not, have him drill those.
My kid did way better on ACT than SAT in case you want to try that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1410 is DS's first SAT score.
He is g11, with all A and 1 B+ in all AP classes
which AP? That matters more than SAT if you are targeting T20 privates or UVA in state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1410 is DS's first SAT score.
He is g11, with all A and 1 B+ in all AP classes
What is the 1410 breakdown?
What APs did he take so far including this year in 11th.
What is his PSAT 10 or PSAT 8/9 score? That converted to percentile is his natural range. Do not encourage him to overprep just to get a super high score--even if he could he will not likely be able to keep up at a top-10 school with a baseline 1410 unless his PSAT indicates the 1410 is below expected for his intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what timing is prep available? E.g., is it like a 4 sessions a month before an SAT? Who offers it?
Don't act so helpless. There are tons of free resources online. You could even buy a book! Or Google for prep courses in your area.