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Success on the SAT isn’t about “trying your best.” It’s about preparing professionally. At The Best Test Prep, we don’t rely on amateurish tips, tricks, or recycled test-taking clichés. We build professionals—students who walk into the testing center knowing exactly what to expect, exactly what to do, and exactly how to execute. In this guide on 5 Test Prep Strategies from Top SAT Instructors in New York City, you’ll learn the precise methods our highest-performing students used to reach elite scores. As top-tier SAT instructors based in New York City, we’ve worked with students from every background—National Merit Scholars, underdogs, and everyone in between. Many have been bright and motivated, but what they all have in common isn’t innate brilliance. It’s that they followed effective strategies, consistently and without exception. Below are five such strategies—practical, time-tested, and non-negotiable for students who intend to master the SAT.

High-performing students don’t wing it. Here’s how the best actually prepare.

  1. Start Early

If your timeline begins with “I’ll start after junior year,” it’s behind schedule.

Top scorers begin preparing at least four to six months before their target test date. This doesn’t mean endless hours of cramming. It means methodical, low-friction work done consistently over time. Early prep provides the luxury of spacing out practice, reinforcing long-term retention, and layering skill development strategically. It prevents panic, allows for course correction, and gives students time to turn weaknesses into strengths before the stakes are high.

This is about not only getting ahead, but also building a brain that functions like a machine on Test Day—no hesitation, no confusion, and no wasted time. Your brain on Test Day should be like a well-oiled machine.

Students who score in the top 1% rarely wait until they feel pressure to begin. They prepare before pressure even enters the equation.

  1. Use Diagnostic Testing as a Guide

Effective prep doesn’t begin with a pile of worksheets. It starts with a diagnostic test.

Every student we work with completes a full-length diagnostic test at the beginning of preparation, and it’s not a small item—it’s foundational. You cannot prepare efficiently if you don’t know what you’re preparing for. A diagnostic test reveals a wealth  of information, such as strong and weak subject matter and question types, patterns of errors, focus issues, timing difficulties, and test-taking mechanics. From there, we create a precision-calibrated study plan tailored to the student’s exact profile. No wasted time, no generic curriculum, and no guesswork.

This is what it means to treat the SAT like a professional would. We make you into a professional test-taker—not a content memorizer, and not a Test Day gambler. A methodical operator who knows the test inside-out, upside-down, and backwards, and has full situational control.

  1. Take Real Practice Tests

Would you train for a piano recital using an off-brand keyboard with missing keys? Then don’t prepare for the SAT with unofficial test materials.

The only way to complete your SAT fluency is by practicing with actual College Board-released practice tests. That’s what real preparation looks like. Third-party material often fails to mimic the subtleties of SAT logic, leading to unpreparedness on Test Day.

When you train with real material, you’re learning not just what to answer—you’re learning how the test writers think. That’s the difference between knowledge and command. And if you want to score in the 1500s, command is necessary.

High scorers develop an instinct for how the SAT constructs its traps, phrases its logic, and buries simplicity inside complexity. They know what questions to anticipate.

  1. Learn and Apply a Professional Method for Every Question Type

It you’re a bright student, you’re going to take the test like a bright student. The only question is, will you take it like a bright amateur or like a bright professional?

Every question type on the SAT—whether Math, Reading, or Writing—follows predictable patterns, and there are professional methods designed to break each one of them down efficiently and accurately. All methods are pie in the sky at first, so we train in them until they’re like second nature.

When students master these methods, they remain focused and never have the opportunity to stress. Professional methods are the difference between stumbling through the test and complaining that it wasn’t hard enough.

  1. Review Everything—Even What You Got Right

Many students review only their mistakes. The top scorers review everything.

Why? Because getting a question right doesn’t always mean you understood it. Maybe you guessed. Maybe your method was inefficient. Maybe your logic was flawed, but luck was on your side. That’s not a strategy—that’s a liability.

We train our students to quickly review every question from every practice set:

  • What was the question testing?
  • What method did I use?
  • Did I watch out for the traps?
  • Could I have solved it faster or more efficiently?

This transforms random success into a repeatable performance. By the time our students walk into the testing room, the SAT feels like a routine, a video game they’ve already played a thousand times and know how to win.

Let other students panic while you casually ace your test.

The Best Test Prep Can Help You Become a Professional Test-Taker

You don’t need a new app, planner, or playlist to get motivated. You need professional guidance.

These five strategies are the foundation of elite SAT performance, used by top scorers in New York City and worldwide. They’re not amateurish “tips and tricks.” They’re not “quick fixes.” They’re an overall professional approach to the test.

Call (844) 672-PREP to start training with a professional SAT instructor in NYC.
You’ll prepare like the top 1%—so you can score like them.

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SHSAT Test Section # of Questions Timing
English Language Arts (ELA)
67
180 minutes
Math
67

Total Exam Time

3 hours not counting breaks between sections

SSAT Test Section # of Questions Timing
Writing Sample
1
25 minutes
Quantitative 1
25
30 minutes
Reading
40
40 minutes
Verbal
60
30 minutes
Quantitative 2
25
30 minutes
Experimental
16
150 minutes

Total Exam Time

2 hours, 50 minutes not counting breaks between sections

ISEE Test Section # of Questions Timing
Verbal Reasoning
40 questions
20 minutes
Quantitative Reasoning
37 questions
35 minutes
Reading Comprehension
36 questions
35 minutes
Mathematics Achievement
47 questions
40 minutes

Total Exam Time

2 hours, 10 minutes not counting breaks between sections

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GMAT Test Section # of Questions Timing
Quantitative Reasoning
21 questions
45 minutes
Verbal Reasoning
23 questions
45 minutes
Data Insights
20 questions
45 minutes

Total Exam Time

2 hours, 15 minutes not counting breaks between sections

GRE Test Section # of Questions Timing
Analytical Writing
1 essay prompt
30 minutes
Verbal Reasoning
Section 1: 12 questions

Section 2: 15 questions
Section 1: 18 minutes

Section 2: 23 minutes
Quantitative Reasoning
Section 1: 12 questions

Section 2: 15 questions
Section 1: 21 minutes

Section 2: 26 minutes

Total Exam Time

1 hour, 58 minutes not counting breaks between sections

SAT Test Section # of Questions Timing
Reading and Writing
1st module: 27 questions

2nd module: 27 questions
1st module: 32 minutes

2nd module: 32 mintues
Math
1st module: 22 questions

2nd module: 22 questions
1st module: 35 minutes

2nd module: 35 mintues

Total Exam Time

2 hours, 14 minutes not counting breaks between sections

ACT Test Section # of Questions Timing
English
75 questions
45 minutes
Math
60 questions
60 minutes
Reading
40 questions
35 minutes
Science
40 questions
35 minutes
Writing (Optional)
1 prompt
40 minutes

Total Exam Time

3 hours, 35 minutes not counting breaks between sections

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