A unit-by-unit AP Precalculus study guide covering all three tested units, the four free-response task types, and the three mathematical practices — with links to all 30 free practice drills organized by topic.
Most ACT study guides underestimate the test — especially its time pressure. This guide, built on how experienced tutors actually prepare students, walks you through every step: diagnosing your weaknesses, prioritizing your three core sections, deciding whether to add optional Science, managing pacing, and building the real skills the ACT rewards.
After 20+ years of SAT tutoring, I’ve watched students waste months preparing the wrong topics. This guide breaks down the 10 most frequently tested SAT Math topics, explains what each one actually requires, and links to free practice drills — plus a score-range prioritization framework so you know exactly where to start.
The PSAT and SAT test the same skills, use the same digital adaptive format, and are the same length — but they serve very different purposes. In this guide, a 20-year SAT/PSAT tutor and Barron’s author breaks down the key differences, explains how the National Merit Scholarship Program works, and tells you exactly when PSAT prep is worth your time.
Most students who struggle on AP® Biology don’t have a content problem — they have a study method problem. This post gives you a unit-by-unit study plan built around the six science practices the exam actually rewards, with free practice drills for every unit.
By Brian Stewart, Barron’s SAT, ACT & PSAT Author & Perfect SAT/ACT Scorer Most students who struggle on AP® World History: Modern don’t struggle because they didn’t read the textbook. They struggle because they studied the wrong way — memorizing dynasties, dates, and geographic facts instead of building the analytical skills the exam actually measures. […]
Most students who struggle with AP English Language and Composition aren’t struggling because they can’t write. They’re struggling because they’re writing the wrong things — summarizing when they should be arguing, listing evidence when they should be connecting it, and reaching for impressive-sounding sentences when what the rubric rewards is clarity of reasoning. Compare these […]
By Brian Stewart, Barron’s SAT, ACT & PSAT Author & Perfect SAT/ACT Scorer Most students who struggle on the AP® U.S. History exam don’t struggle because they didn’t work hard. They studied the wrong things, in the wrong order, without a clear sense of what the exam actually rewards. This post gives you a concrete, […]
The ACT English section tests 50 questions in 35 minutes — and the vast majority of those questions come down to grammar. Not general writing ability, not vocabulary, not style preferences. Grammar rules. Specific, learnable, testable grammar rules. The good news? The ACT tests the same rules over and over. Students who learn the core […]
The SAT Grammar Rules That Show Up Most Often (And How to Stop Missing Them) By Brian Stewart · March 2026 The SAT’s Reading & Writing section tests grammar in a very specific way. It isn’t asking you to recite rules or label parts of speech — it’s presenting you with a sentence that has […]