The Problem
When you miss a level 5 question on an SAT practice test, you need to practice a dozen or more just like it. But where are you going to find the questions?
The Solution
CrushTheTest. Suppose you miss a hard probability question. Start with CrushTheTest Probability I. There you find 8 probability questions, ALL as hard as the hardest real SAT questions. CrushTheTest Probability II has eight more, even harder, problems - think two or three level 5 SAT questions rolled into one. Not enough? Hone your skills to a razor-sharp edge with two super-hard problems in CrushTheTest Probability III.
You won't be missing any more SAT probability questions after doing all three CrushTheTest levels. But what about remainders questions? You're covered. Prime numbers? We've got that too. Functions? Of course! There are 21 CrushTheTest categories and a total of 378 questions. Each category has three difficulty levels: hard, harder, and hardest.
The 21 CrushTheTest Categories
The best way to become an SAT expert is to do many questions in a row of the same type. Here are the CrushTheTest categories, each with 18 questions: Algebra; Fractions; Functions; Word Problems; Lengths and Angles; Areas; Triangles; Points and Space; Prices, Percents, 2D, 3D; Units; Averages; Probability; Mean, Median, Mode; Divisibility and Primes; Properties; Remainders; Digitology; Graphs and Charts; Reasoning; Combinations; Sequences.
Who Should Use CrushTheTest?
If you score above 600 on a practice test and you are looking to break 700 and perhaps get a perfect score, CrushTheTest is for you. You don't need to be a genius to get an 800 on the math SAT; you do need practice. With hundreds of hard, occasionally-amusing questions and clearly-explained, in-depth solutions plus tips and tricks and hilarious SAT history, CrushTheTest offers students a hard-to-beat test-prep experience.
About the Author: Dr. Matthew Kohler received his Ph.D. in nuclear physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder and taught physics at Bridgewater State College in Massachusetts before returning to Colorado and founding CrushTheTest Tutoring and SAT Prep. Dr. Kohler is the author of a number of popular magazine articles about science and also published a simple explanation of the twin paradox in special relativity in Foundations of Physics Letters. Matt lives in Denver, Colorado with his wife, Kendra. This is his first book.