This is the #1 seller on Amazon with predominantly 5 star reviews
There's also an SAT prep section on Khan Academy if you want video lectures
See if your parents/guardian would let you find a tutor. If this isn't practical, get a big book of calculus exercises with solutions, there's loads on Amazon (e.g. this one).
That's insane dude!! 780 is freaking awesome. I'm aiming for 700+ on November's math since I got 670 on math level 2 for October. Btw for bio I'd recommend you buy the 2 official college board bio tests from Amazon. I used it and started with a 640 to a final score of 730! Good luck! https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Biology-Study-College/dp/1457309203
this was the official guide that you have to buy from collegeboard. it includes 4 practice tests
I'm no scorer, but I can point out some things you might want to improve on.
Be more formal. Get rid of any pronoun that includes the graders or you ("we" seems to pop up a lot). You want to be as impersonal as possible. Also, get rid of the caps. It's unnecessary.
Have a structure. You need to at least have your examples spaced out, one per paragraph. The essay rambles on without establishing anything, really. 3-5 sentences each for intro and conclusion, 5-7 for each body paragraph for examples. I'd skew toward the lower end considering you only have 25 minutes and a limited amount of time. Also, the call to action at the end, while nice, isn't necessary.
Explain. You kind of answer the question (no, the world isn't changing for the better) but there's no thesis statement directly answering the question. You need two or three examples to emphasize and support your point; you only have one. You need to explain your examples as well, and how they relate to your point; I can somewhat see the contrast you're trying to make between Back To The Future's idealized world and reality, but there's no smooth transition and your rhetorical questions don't really go back to your point. Speaking of which, please cut those down. If you're going to use one, you better be able to answer it.
If you can get your hands on one within the week, I recommend you get the Blue Book. It's the College Board's official study guide for the SAT, and it will give you guidelines for your essays. Otherwise, all I can really say is keep practicing. What exactly is your goal score?
If you are more specific in what seemed new or different from what you knew we would be better able to help you.
Take a deep breath, get yourself a Schaum’s Outline on Calculus ( https://www.amazon.com/Schaums-Outline-Calculus-6th-Problems/dp/0071795537 ) and start picking things apart. You can do this but it will take work! Good Luck
Calculus. Ayres.
It's an old book but it's very complete and clear.
Each unit has a lot of exercises which come in very useful.
I've been using the 2nd edition but I've only been able to find copies of the 6th edition on amazon.
I'm not sure about AP stats or euro, but I did APUSH history last year (4 on exam) and the resources that helped me the most were the fiveable cram pass which is $35 or $5 for the live stream where they review everything before the quiz and the No-Bull review book (https://www.amazon.com/No-Bull-Review-History-Subject/dp/1514337509).
College board does sell a subject test study guide which includes every subject test
I was using CrackSAT, but I thought the tests didn't seem official. The SAT Math 2 book by College Board with 4 official tests is only $15 on Amazon, so I just bought it.
College board makes an SAT physics subject test book with 4 past released sat physics tests. I recommend it.
I got mine on amazon its not too expensive.
Go and buy the book of 20 on Amazon and take several (only an hour apiece) to determine your best 2. Then take those. You can sit for the December 1 test date.
https://www.amazon.com/Official-Study-Guide-Subject-Tests/dp/0874479754/
There are sample tests in the College Board book(s) of subject tests. For example, https://www.amazon.com/Official-Study-Guide-Subject-Tests/dp/0874479754/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=college+board+subject+test&qid=1597001654&sr=8-1
Hey man! A great book that I used to study for the most recent Chem Subject test was SAT’s official Subject Test Guide. It was really informative the only thing that I needed to find out for myself was factoids. Since all of them aren’t in the book, there’s tons of quizlets on factoids though. I got my book off of Amazon prime for like 10$ or something it was pretty cheap.
https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Chemistry-Study-College/dp/145730919X
I think you can only get the tests from a hard copy of the book (https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Physics-Study-College/dp/1457309211/ref=nodl_). If you’re taking the test this weekend you can order rn and get the book tomorrow with prime ������.
https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Chemistry-Study-College/dp/145730919X
Also try googling “SAT Subject Tests Past Papers”
This book by the College Board has two official, previously administered subject tests.
Other than that, I read the Barron's, and that was sufficient for me to get an 800.
There are some practice tests floating around online, but almost all of these are unofficial and unrealistic in my opinion.
Yeah it was very hard for me, I only took one which was in the official SAT Subject Test guidebook, https://www.amazon.com/Official-Study-Guide-Subject-Tests/dp/0874479754
I could probably dig for more by asking r/Sat if anyone has any google drives of either Latin tests. Another possibility is simply buying older versions of the Subject Test guidebook in the hopes of a different Latin practice test offered.
Most students only need two books:
1) The Official SAT Subject Test in Mathematics Level 2 Study Guide with 4 real tests and explanations. Take these exams at regular intervals during your prep to gauge your progress--they are the only scores you can trust!
2) The Barron's Book. Use these practice tests to study and practice between official practice tests (beware that the Barron's tests are harder than the real thing).
-Brian
Sorry guys, I meant only 4 tests (there used to be only 2 for many years!) but you didn't have to be so ruuuude. Don't you know I'm human too? ; )
The 4 tests you refer to from the 2017 edition of the official guide could be quite old, for all we know, which is why the scoring curves can't necessarily be trusted. I know that at least one of them (test #4 in the book) has been around since the 1990s.
College board has a book you can buy. It has real practice SATs designed by College Board.
Edit 1: https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Chemistry-Study-College/dp/145730919X/ref=sr_1_11?ie=UTF8&qid=1505845066&sr=8-11&keywords=college+board+sat+book Here is the link on amazon.
try and find a pdf of shaum's outlines. they are broken up by class and the higher level stuff is broken up by subject.
They are good for letting you know the type of questions you can expect.
There are two sample papers in the official guide which will give you a good direction
https://www.amazon.com/Official-Subject-Chemistry-Study-College/dp/145730919X
For APUSH, I'm using the No Bull Review (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1514337509/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_uSO6ybMPZ8F9W ). It was reviewed by Adam Norris as well Also, I'm going through my past notes to see things I forgot and try to quiz myself on it so I know the material. Maybe look at the review videos first just to refresh your memory and then do more intense studying
Kallis worked the best for me. It's not very well-known, but the reading and writing sections are very similar to that of the actual SAT. The actual lessons are also really great. https://www.amazon.com/Redesigned-Pattern-Strategy-Practice-College/dp/099116573X/ref=sr_1_11?ie=UTF8&qid=1489650279&sr=8-11&keywords=sat+book
The description of the book you listed is the same description as the pre-changed sat book, so I don't know if this is real or just a bug.
There is one inside the big blue book released by Collegeboard of 20 subject tests, one for each subject. collegeboard subject test book!
Current SAT, all the way. Take it in October or November so you can knock out the SAT and PSAT around the same time. Then just focus on your schoolwork! Definitely get your hands on a copy of the College Board Official SAT Study Guide, as the tests are a bit more authentic than the online tests. The first three tests in that book are actually real SATs that were administered a few years ago and retired, so they'll be the most accurate predictors of how you'll do on the real thing.
And you're welcome. Thank you for saying thank you.