Short-form videos can be surprisingly powerful for SAT/ACT prep—especially when each one teaches a single “micro-skill” you can apply immediately on practice tests. In this article, we’ll group four quick lessons into one theme: how to think and work like a high-scoring test taker. That includes technical accuracy (so you don’t lose points to formatting) and flexible reasoning (so you don’t freeze when a problem feels unfamiliar).
Watch the three tips below, then use the strategy sections afterward to turn them into a repeatable practice routine.
Student-produced response questions (often called “grid-ins”) reward careful formatting. If your answer isn’t a whole number, it’s usually safest to enter it as a fraction—and on many tests you’ll need to write it as an improper fraction rather than a mixed number.
Many of the hardest math questions aren’t hard because of the arithmetic—they’re hard because they ask about possibilities. “What could be true?” signals that you may need to reason through multiple cases rather than hunt for one fixed value.
On timed tests, uncertainty is normal. Strong test takers don’t panic when they don’t instantly see the path—they pause, consider options, and try a reasonable next step to reach a workable solution.
High-quality SAT/ACT prep isn’t just about memorizing tricks. It trains you to analyze information in a standardized “language” (math and academic English), weigh choices, and justify a solution—skills that matter far beyond one test day.
Scores often swing by 30–80 points due to avoidable errors: entering the wrong form, misreading a condition, or leaving a response blank because you weren’t sure how to type it. Create a short checklist you run automatically on practice sets.
This kind of routine is boring—in a good way. It protects your score when you’re tired, stressed, or short on time.
On SAT/ACT math, wording matters. Two phrases that should change your approach immediately:
When students treat “could” as “must,” they overwork the problem and often get stuck. When they treat “must” as “could,” they accept a tempting answer that fails a different case.
Ambiguity isn’t a sign you’re “bad at math.” It’s a sign the test is doing its job: presenting something unfamiliar and seeing how you respond. Try this quick reset:
That mindset shift—staying calm and systematic—often separates students who finish with time to check from students who spiral on two questions and run out of time.
Consistency beats marathon sessions. Here’s a straightforward plan that builds both accuracy and critical thinking:
Parents can support this by asking one helpful question after practice: “What did you learn from review?” The goal is to build the habit of reflection, not just grind problems.
If you want expert guidance on pacing, accuracy, and high-impact strategies—plus a personalized practice plan—MyGuru can help. Contact us for SAT/ACT tutoring: https://myguruedge.com/sat-tutoring.