Anonymous wrote:It all depends.
Some tutors are test preparers or know of someone who writes these tests.
Please don’t jump into me being a conspiracy theorist.
I know very well what I am saying. These tutors obviously won’t reveal anything but will go over material which is quite similar to the upcoming actual tests; thus 4-5 hours may help with gaining more than 100 points and 10 hours causing a gain of 200 points in math.
Anonymous wrote:DD is a hard working student but not a great test taker. She’s registered for the SAT in August and has some time this summer to prep but we want to be as efficient as possible. She has accommodations for anxiety and so far her prepping has consisted of an 8-hour online boot camp and self study with Khan, but she’s been more focused on her schoolwork and AP exams this year so hasn’t been as disciplined as she could be with the SAT prep. She’s taken both the SAT and the ACT and prefers the SAT so we won’t bother with the ACT again.
Fall 2023 PSAT 1120
March 2024 SAT 1280
April ACT 27
June 2024 SAT 1270
Would tutoring help a kid like this? She’ll need at least a 1400 to submit her scores to her preferred schools. Her performance is just below the midpoint for her high performing public school. Would you pay for tutoring in this situation or give up and TO?
I’m leaning toward tutoring because I think DD might regret not doing her best - DH thinks it’s not worth it and she’s probably maxed out.
Anonymous wrote:OP-I have a kid with anxiety in 9th grade and I anticipate that she is going to struggle with the timed nature of the SAT. Is there anything you would have done differently like started practice tests earlier?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again with another note. I don’t believe her test anxiety is the problem anymore. Her accommodations help a lot. She says she gets tripped up on the wording of questions and is weak on the math. Verbal is 680. We’ve worked hard to minimize her stress, and she’s only applying to TO schools. She just wants to do her best. This is for her, not us, and we want to help support her goals.
I would do test prep this summer. One on one. My kid had very similar scores on the practice tests at the same point, and is responding very well to tests prep. Practice tests are now in 1400s.
This is encouraging, thanks! I hope DD has the same experience. She’s excited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again with another note. I don’t believe her test anxiety is the problem anymore. Her accommodations help a lot. She says she gets tripped up on the wording of questions and is weak on the math. Verbal is 680. We’ve worked hard to minimize her stress, and she’s only applying to TO schools. She just wants to do her best. This is for her, not us, and we want to help support her goals.
I would do test prep this summer. One on one. My kid had very similar scores on the practice tests at the same point, and is responding very well to tests prep. Practice tests are now in 1400s.
Anonymous wrote:OP again with another note. I don’t believe her test anxiety is the problem anymore. Her accommodations help a lot. She says she gets tripped up on the wording of questions and is weak on the math. Verbal is 680. We’ve worked hard to minimize her stress, and she’s only applying to TO schools. She just wants to do her best. This is for her, not us, and we want to help support her goals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We’ve decided to sign her up for six weekly tutoring sessions through PrepMatters, which includes homework materials and proctored practice tests. DD is excited and I guess it’s worth it to know she’s left nothing on the table.
How did you choose prep matters?
I’d heard good things from other parents, read good reviews on DCUM, and checked out Yelp. I liked that there was no package contract and it’s personalized. She won’t need more diagnostics because she already has practice tests through BlueBook. The tutor will use those to build her program. After the initial consultation, we were matched with one of the more affordable tutors and we will end up spending $1250-$1500 for 5-6 sessions. She’ll get 30-60 minutes of homework per week to do before sessions, and will probably do 2 more practice tests. That’s all I’m willing to do.
Thank you—super helpful. One more question: How do you know it will be only six sessions? They don’t do packages, so was that an estimate based on the practice tests or something else?
Anonymous wrote:DD is a hard working student but not a great test taker. She’s registered for the SAT in August and has some time this summer to prep but we want to be as efficient as possible. She has accommodations for anxiety and so far her prepping has consisted of an 8-hour online boot camp and self study with Khan, but she’s been more focused on her schoolwork and AP exams this year so hasn’t been as disciplined as she could be with the SAT prep. She’s taken both the SAT and the ACT and prefers the SAT so we won’t bother with the ACT again.
Fall 2023 PSAT 1120
March 2024 SAT 1280
April ACT 27
June 2024 SAT 1270
Would tutoring help a kid like this? She’ll need at least a 1400 to submit her scores to her preferred schools. Her performance is just below the midpoint for her high performing public school. Would you pay for tutoring in this situation or give up and TO?
I’m leaning toward tutoring because I think DD might regret not doing her best - DH thinks it’s not worth it and she’s probably maxed out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The most surprising thing we learned when hiring an SAT tutor for math (after DC self-studied and took the test 2x on his own): Tutor said to DC, “Wait, you’ve been doing all the math problems during the test? That’s not how we do it here.” And proceeded to teach him a process of evaluating/eliminating the math answers to arrive at the correct answer much more quickly that how he was previously doing it. His math score increased 60 points using this method.
Can you recommend the tutor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a hard working student but not a great test taker. She’s registered for the SAT in August and has some time this summer to prep but we want to be as efficient as possible. She has accommodations for anxiety and so far her prepping has consisted of an 8-hour online boot camp and self study with Khan, but she’s been more focused on her schoolwork and AP exams this year so hasn’t been as disciplined as she could be with the SAT prep. She’s taken both the SAT and the ACT and prefers the SAT so we won’t bother with the ACT again.
Fall 2023 PSAT 1120
March 2024 SAT 1280
April ACT 27
June 2024 SAT 1270
Would tutoring help a kid like this? She’ll need at least a 1400 to submit her scores to her preferred schools. Her performance is just below the midpoint for her high performing public school. Would you pay for tutoring in this situation or give up and TO?
I’m leaning toward tutoring because I think DD might regret not doing her best - DH thinks it’s not worth it and she’s probably maxed out.
Are you kidding? Everyone gets tutoring. And most are anxious before tests. Total BS to get extra time. Hope your DD isn’t a surgeon or trial lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:DD is a hard working student but not a great test taker. She’s registered for the SAT in August and has some time this summer to prep but we want to be as efficient as possible. She has accommodations for anxiety and so far her prepping has consisted of an 8-hour online boot camp and self study with Khan, but she’s been more focused on her schoolwork and AP exams this year so hasn’t been as disciplined as she could be with the SAT prep. She’s taken both the SAT and the ACT and prefers the SAT so we won’t bother with the ACT again.
Fall 2023 PSAT 1120
March 2024 SAT 1280
April ACT 27
June 2024 SAT 1270
Would tutoring help a kid like this? She’ll need at least a 1400 to submit her scores to her preferred schools. Her performance is just below the midpoint for her high performing public school. Would you pay for tutoring in this situation or give up and TO?
I’m leaning toward tutoring because I think DD might regret not doing her best - DH thinks it’s not worth it and she’s probably maxed out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We’ve decided to sign her up for six weekly tutoring sessions through PrepMatters, which includes homework materials and proctored practice tests. DD is excited and I guess it’s worth it to know she’s left nothing on the table.
How did you choose prep matters?
I’d heard good things from other parents, read good reviews on DCUM, and checked out Yelp. I liked that there was no package contract and it’s personalized. She won’t need more diagnostics because she already has practice tests through BlueBook. The tutor will use those to build her program. After the initial consultation, we were matched with one of the more affordable tutors and we will end up spending $1250-$1500 for 5-6 sessions. She’ll get 30-60 minutes of homework per week to do before sessions, and will probably do 2 more practice tests. That’s all I’m willing to do.