I was procrastinator; I even started to prepare for the exam seriously several days ago, but I always used to read 2 articles a day and write new words from them.
I'll send some online magazines I read and found extremely similar to exam passages.
- During the exam, be honest with yourself. Don't be like "oh, I'm just gonna reread it, maybe I'll figure out." Don't waste time on something you don't know! Just pick an option and move on.
For the rest of the reading questions, you need more understanding. I again repeat: without practice, you cannot develop this skill. You should be able to recognize the patterns behind every question.
And last one, the most useful tip for me, was finding wrong answers. In Reading&Writing, it's easier to prove wrong answer wrong than it is to prove a right answer right. College board tries to make right answers vague and bland so they don't stand out. If you cannot prove a choice wrong, then it's probably right answer.
I'll send some online magazines I read and found extremely similar to exam passages.
- During the exam, be honest with yourself. Don't be like "oh, I'm just gonna reread it, maybe I'll figure out." Don't waste time on something you don't know! Just pick an option and move on.
For the rest of the reading questions, you need more understanding. I again repeat: without practice, you cannot develop this skill. You should be able to recognize the patterns behind every question.
And last one, the most useful tip for me, was finding wrong answers. In Reading&Writing, it's easier to prove wrong answer wrong than it is to prove a right answer right. College board tries to make right answers vague and bland so they don't stand out. If you cannot prove a choice wrong, then it's probably right answer.