We want to wish all our ePrep students best of luck on this Saturday’s SAT test. You should feel very confident based on the effort and practice you’ve put in over these past several months. Following the ePrep method of practice, grade and review (under simulated, test day conditions!) you are well prepared to take on the SAT.
You might consider reviewing our ePrep strategy session videos this week as a final preparation going into the test. Summarized below are links to many key video lessons focused on test taking strategies.
SAT Test Day: The Night Before and Morning Of
Real SAT Stories: Second Guessing on the SAT
SAT Directions: Optimize Your Time on Test Day
When to Guess on the SAT Writing Section
When to Guess on the SAT Critical Reading Section
When to Guess on the SAT Math Section
SAT Sentence Completion Questions: When to Guess?
Don’t Blame the Chicken Pox for SAT Math Mistakes
Approach to SAT Math Problems
Habeus Answer, or Show Yourself the Answer!
Mastering Your SAT Test Weaknesses
SAT Questions…Easiest to Hardest
Autopilot - Don’t Set a Course for a Lower SAT Score
A Lesson from a Course in Wills, Trusts and Estates
Bubbling: Avoid Mistakes in Your Answer Key
Please Put Down Your Pencil!
The Dreaded SAT Experimental Section
Additionally, we’ve included a link to our presentation (in PDF format) on “what to do the night before and the morning of the SAT test” right here: Webinar Presentation - Night Before the SAT
Best of luck on Saturday!



























December 6th, 2008 at 5:07 pm
I took the SAT today and I noticed on the math section I was
answering around 15, 16 questions each do you think it is
possible that with that I can get around 600 or in the 600’s for
the math section
December 7th, 2008 at 8:54 pm
is it just me or was the SAT on saturday ridiculously easy?
December 9th, 2008 at 6:03 pm
I hear what you saying I kind of just breezed through it,
but I hope my scores reflect my feelings about the test
December 9th, 2008 at 6:41 pm
Ijeoma,
If you answered most of them correctly, you will certainly be in the 600s in math.