Cracking the SAT, 1999 Edition
Adam Robinson was born in 1955. He graduated from Wharton before earning a law degree at Oxford University in England. Robinson devised and perfected the now-famous “Joe Bloggs” approach to beating standardized tests in 1980, as well as numerous other core Princeton Review techniques. He has collaborated with The Princeton Review to develop a number of its courses.brbrJohn Katzman was born in 1959. He graduated from Princeton University in 1980. After working briefly on Wall Street, he founded The Princeton Review in 1981. Having begun with nineteen 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, and LSAT.WE KNOW THE SATbrThe experts at The Princeton Review take the SAT and other standardized tests each year to make sure you get the most up-to-date, thoroughly researched books possible.brbrWE KNOW STUDENTSbrEach year we help more than two million students score high with our courses, bestselling books, and award-winning software:brbrWE GET RESULTSbrStudents who take our six-week SAT course have an average score increase of 140 points (verified by Roper Starch Worldwide). The proven techniques we teach in our courses are in this book.brbrAND IF IT’S ON THE SAT, IT’S IN THIS BOOKbrThe Princeton Review realizes that acing the SAT is very different from getting straight As in school. We don’t try to teach you everything there is to know about math and English–only the techniques that you need to score high on the SAT. There’s a big difference. In Cracking the SAT & PSAT, we’ll teach you how to think like the test makers and:brbr*Eliminate answer choices that look right but are planted to fool youbr*Solve SAT analogies when you’re not sure what all the words meanbr*Tackle verbal ?â=p£× ¾Ûâ¬