SAT Strategy and Pacing
Although time is strictly limited on the SAT, working too quickly
can damage your score. Many problems hinge on subtle points,
and most require careful reading of the set-up. Because high
school can put heavy reading loads on students, many will follow
their academic conditioning and read questions quickly, looking
only for the gist of what each is asking. Once they have found
it, they mark their answer and move on, confident they have
answered it correctly. Later, many are startled to discover
that they missed questions because they either misread the problems
or overlooked subtle points.
To do well in your classes, you have to attempt to solve every,
or nearly every, problem on a test. Not so with the SAT. In
fact, if you try to solve every problem on this test you will
probably decimate you score. For the vast majority of people,
the key to performing well on the SAT is not the number of questions
they answer, within reason, but the percentage they answer correctly.

Have a great link for test preparation, please inform us here
|