Archive for the ‘WilsonDailyPrep’ Category

SAT Prep Decreases Luck Factor

Bad SAT Luck: Dealing with Disappointing Scores

For some people, March is a lucky month filled with pots of gold and four-leaf clovers.  For others, it may be the month of dealing with disappointing SAT scores.  A little advice from a pro: take a deep breath, push through, and try again.

The SAT test is a process. It is not a one or two-shot deal. And, there is a luck factor!

A majority of SAT performance is, of course, practice and preparation. But, as an SAT tutor I’m not ashamed to admit that there are some easier tests and some much harder tests (Yes, I’ve even missed a sentence completion or reading question!). If your child “bombs” the March test, do not give up. Rather, your child needs to get angry, get motivated, get over it, and try again.

First, there are many things outside of your child’s control that can drastically affect scores.

  • The “Experimental Section”: There’s always one extra section on the test that doesn’t count towards the score.  If this section happens to be reading, you can expect scores to drop.
  • Sick, sniveling, 30-tissue kid in the next desk over: Concentrating for four hours is hard as is, and with the sneezy boy sitting next to you, it can be impossible!
  • Idiotic Proctor: Inexperienced (or just idiotic) proctors can shave off time from each section, forbid students from having water, or be distracting in general.
  • Allergy season: Need I say more?

Students need to remember that this is a standardized test: it is predictable, patterned, and involves practice.  Students should use their score reports to work on weak areas.  Remember, students can take this test several times, so focus, fine tune, and improve.

Student must:

  • Remain confident: Tell them about a time you did not reach your potential on the first try.
  • Understand that you’re behind them: Let them know that they haven’t let you down.
  • Visualize Success: They should think about a time that they did reach their potential and use this as motivation.
  • Blast a Pump up Song: Sometimes just listening to a good song can shake a bad mood.  Try David Powter’s “Bad Day.”

So a bad score may be chalked up to a bad day, a bad test, or any number of things.  The key is to move on and focus on the next opportunity.

SAT Prep in a Recession

Time recently ran an article about how teens and parents are handling the need for SAT prep during a recession.   For many years now parents have been willing to shell up more cash than they’d like to admit, just to have their child in private tutoring lessons for the SAT test.  As a result, many people believed that the SAT exam was “easier” for wealthy kids because of the resources available to them.  It seems that like most other industries, the recession has forced the SAT prep $4 billion industry to stop gouging prices and offer more reasonable prices.  Could a recession bring the SAT test down to a more level playing field?  We will have to wait and see on that one but we do know that SAT prep these days is centered around online programs with qualified tutors on-call to answer questions.

Is there an advantage or disadvantage to online tutoring?  Some say that the reduction in face-to-face time will cause kids to feel less pressure to study and decreasing the amount of actual SAT prep.  However, Laura Wilson, founder of WilsonDailyPrep, was able to capitalize on such a turn around.  After years of teaching, Wilson concluded that even six minutes a day of SAT prep every day can be more effective than students spend a couple hours cramming for weekly tutoring sessions.

Although WilsonDailyPrep offers private and class tutoring, recently Wilson has launched her online tutoring session.  WilsonDailyPrep’s online tutoring program  sends six questions every day to each kid over email.  Students are also encouraged to keep a stack of vocabulary words in the bathroom for short study sessions at any time. Parents are notified when a kid has not completed specific tasks online or is falling behind in his practie scores.  WilsonDailyPrep even guarentees a 200 point increase on the student’s SAT score after just a few months of studying.

SAT tutoring featured in Westchester Magazine

Westchester Magazine interviewed Laura Wilson about her very successful tutoring service known as WilsonDailyPrep.  When asked for one of her best tricks, Laura mentioned the bathroom vocabulary.  Laura Wilson makes unannounced house visits to check that students are keeping a pile of vocabulary words in their bathroom for 5-minute study sessions.  She reports that approximately 80% of her students have followed through on this trick.

SAT Tips Now On Video

SAT tips and ACT tips that you are learning from this blog and beyond are now posted as videos.  Laura Wilson will explain in her own words each tip and why it is so important to follow.

SAT Prep From An Expert

Laura Wilson of SAT tutoring service, WilsonDailyPrep.Laura Wilson, founder of WilsonDailyPrep, describes her unique formula for scoring well on the SAT and ACT exams. WilsonDailyPrep focuses on teaching their students to study every day. Six questions, six minutes a day is their model for success. They even guarantee a 200 point increase for the SAT test!  As a tutor for the past 20 years, Laura really knows what drives kids to study and stay on track for the SAT test. WilsonDailyPrep offers private tutoring, group lessons and a cutting edge online tutoring service that really works!  If you would like to learn more about Laura’s unique style of studying for the SAT and ACT test, read about the interview printed in Westchester Magazine.

Mission Possible: A 25 minute Essay

Thousands of teenagers across the country will be sweating bullets this summer and early fall. Breaking a sweat has nothing to do with the heat -it has to do with constructing a well-written, proof-read, coherent, legible essay response for College Board. What might seem like Mission Impossible can really be Mission Possible: Crafting a well-written essay in 25 minutes on the SAT.

Writing a stellar, knock-your-socks-off essay in 25 minutes is difficult for an English professor, let alone a nervous teen. However, there are a few tricks up the sleeve of Laura Wilson, founder and president of WilsonDailyPrep, an online tutoring program. The key to SAT success is simple: practice makes perfect! Practicing essay responses will ensure that any student is prepared on test day. But how can you predict the essay question? How will you know what to write about? Laura Wilson’s solution comes from understanding the SAT inside and out. There are patterns found on the essay section -15 patterns to be exact. Heroism, community, conflict, wisdom and sacrifice are just 5 of these circulating essay themes. Students should practice writing essays with these 15 themes, so that on test day, they will have a pre-written essay response at the tips of their fingers -and number two pencils -to work with.

Knowing what to expect on test day takes a bit of the edge off. However, it doesn’t buy you too much time. And time is precious. Laura Wilson offers another helpful hint: Little Children Have Play Sets. This mnemonic device will direct essay writing, especially in high-stress conditions. Often students just ‘jump’ into the essay with no structure and no plan. Students need to take 2 minutes at the beginning and write down Little Children Have Play Sets on their test booklet. The “L” stands for literature, “C” for current events, “H” for history, “P” for personal and “S” for sports. These are the areas from which to draw supporting examples when writing an essay. So, take 2 minutes and formulate an answer, an answer with at least two concrete examples from either history, literature, current events, sports, or the student’s personal life.

It’s test day. You unveil the hideous monster of an SAT essay question, and immediately realize it’s a heroism theme. OK – you’ve written this before. You’re ready. You know you should put literary examples, historical examples and you had a great sports example! But you’ve forgotten! You can’t remember when FDR was president. What was the name of that book again? Tick tock. Tick tock.

The most important aspect of preparing for this essay and avoiding the nightmarish situation above is to not only have a pre-written essay prepared ahead of time, but to be an EXPERT with a few key examples. The real key to tackling your mission impossible is to know your examples down cold! How do you do this? Limit your focus. Choose a universal book: know characters, themes, plot. Just one book. This book should be able to address most of the 15 core topics (I recommend To Kill a Mockingbird, Of Mice and Men, or Lord of the Flies). And choose three moments in history – a war, a person and an era. Look over your class notes. Have these three moments carved into your memory. Just three, not an entire timeline! You should be able to fit your book and at least one of your historical moments into an essay. Then, top it off with some Children – current events. Where do you get the current events? You read Time and Newsweek Magazine three weeks before the SAT. And, voila! A perfect, 25 minute essay…Mission Impossible made Possible. No sweat!

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The Eyeballing Game

Video games are addictive for both kids and adults and The Eyeballing Game is no exception.  This game tests your ability to see and make shapes, lines, and angles by allowing three tries at seven geometric tasks.  An Ontario carpenter launched They Eyeballing Game in September 2009.  Be careful- it is very addictive!

Games are a fun way to stimulate your brain.  Change games often to be sure your brain function is always improving.  These activities can even help you prepare for the SAT exam by training your brain to focus on one question at a time and staying focused for longer periods of time. For more information about preparing for the SAT and ACT test, visit the WilsonDailyPrep website.

AP Central CollegeBoard

Advanced Placement (AP) courses are college level courses that, upon satisfactory completion of CollegeBoard’s AP Exam, may earn up to 5 college credits each.  Not all AP courses are offered at all high schools, and not all AP exam scores (scored 0-5) earn college credits at all schools.

Colleges place much more importance on high school course section that AP exam performance. Exam score do not have to be reported.  However, transcripts are reported, and challenging courses (when appropriate) are more important than A’s in easy classes.

AP courses are rigorous, and the exams are detailed and comprehensive, consisting of both multiple-choice and essay questions.  AP exam schedules are administered in May and are submitted to CollegeBoard for scoring.  Scores are released mid-July.

What’s your learning style?

School is hard for a lot of people, but it helps to know your learning style.  Knowing your learning style – auditory, visual or tactile, can help you study effectively.  Most of us have a general idea of how we learn but it is helpful to learn more about what it means to be a visual learner.  This relatively short quiz that asks questions about how you react to certain situations.  From there it calculates how much of how you learn is auditory, how much is visual and how much is tactile.  This can help you study for tests in school, the SATs, ACTs and help you learn new things throughout life.

WilsonDailyPrep can help you study effectively for the SATs and the ACTs no matter what learning style you have. There is tutoring in person, on the phone (helping to answer daily questions you may have) and an online program to track your improvement.  Mom will be thrilled!

ACT and SAT scoring

Here is a clear comparison chart for the ACTs, the SATS and the new SATs.  This is helpful when a student is faced with deciding which score(s) to send along with the college application process.

Some students will find the SATs easier and some will find the ACTs more manageable.  If you have the opportunity to take both, study for both!  Studying for the SATs does not mean you have studied for the ACTs.  It is especially important to review the directions for each section of each test so that you do not have to spend time figuring it all out the morning of the test.  WilsonDailyPrep offers excellent guidance for both exams.


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