Cracking the SAT, 2002 Edition
bAdam Robinson/bgraduated from Wharton before earning a law degree at Oxford University in England. Robinson, a rated chess master, devised and perfected the Joe Bloggs approach to beating standardized tests in 1980, as well as numerous other core Princeton Review techniques. A freelance author of many books, Robinson has collaborated with the Princeton Review to develop a number if its courses.brbrbJohn Katzman/bgraduated from Princeton University in 1980. After working briefly on Wall Street, he founded the Princeton Review in 1981. Beginning with 219 high school students in his parents’ apartment, Katzman now oversees courses that prepare tens of thousands of high school and college students annually for tests, including the SAT, GRE, GMAT and LSAT.The Princeton Review realizes that acing the SAT is very different from getting straight As in school. The Princeton Review doesn’t try to teach students everything there is to know about math and English–only the techniques they’ll need to score higher on the exam.iTheres a big difference/i. InbCracking the SAT & PSAT/NMSQT/b, The Princeton Review will teach test takers how to think like the test makers and:brbr* Eliminate answer choices that look right but are planted to fool youbr* Master the 250 most important SAT vocabulary wordsbr* Nail even the toughest sections: Analogies, Quantitative Comparison, Critical Reading, and morebrbr** This book includes 2 full-length, simulated SAT exams. Plus, The Princeton Review will show test takers how to go online and take 4 additional exams with instant score analysis. All of TPR’s sample test questions are just like the ones test takers will see on the actual SAT, and TPR fully explains every solution.brbriContents Include/i:brbrbI Orientation/bbrHow to Think About the SATbrCracking the SAT: Basic PrinciplesbrCracking the SAT: Advanced PrinciplesbrIntro to the PSAT/NMSQTbrbII How to Cra?Ð