A parent remarked that his son had begun his SAT study with a combination of “zeal, anxiety, and stress”. Let me address the "Stressed and Anxious" aspect:
Test Prep with Ivy Bound REDUCES stress/anxiety. We teach students new skills
that will help in the areas they most worry about. And we get students to do
practice tests, over and over. After 5
or 6 of these, students know what to expect of the test and what to expect of
themselves ON the test. The anxiety about the "unknown" should
evaporate.
A second anxiety, anxiety about the "importance" of the SAT, still
often exists. That I can't eliminate; but since most students already know the
SAT is important, now I can reduce that anxiety with this message:
Push hard, but know that if you fall short of full SAT success you'll still be
successful beyond high school. You'll go to a good college somewhere, you'll
have a career, you can marry well, your parents will still love you. In working
really hard for SAT success, you will almost certainly have a higher level of
success that you otherwise would see. So I like telling students who currently
have mid-level scores (1550 - 1750): shoot for the 500 point improvement. If
you fall short and "only" rise 350 points, you just GAINED 350
POINTS!
Even a 150 point improvement puts most students into a whole new tier of likely
college acceptances, and/or higher scholarship award money.
Students who takes a "full throttle" attitude inherently reduce
anxiety. That's because they are looking UPward at a hill they are beginning to
climb. Falling down is not even a thought unless you are looking down from
heights. Look upward, knowing there's a safety net below, and I suspect your
anxiety will lessen.
Ivy Bound offers SAT
“Boot Camps” throughout the Northeast and on 8 college campuses. Boot Camps get students to build SAT reading
skills, to build SAT essay skills, to perfect their grammar, and to begin
“reasoning” the SAT way. Each “Boot Camp” is open to students in grades 7
– 11. They include 3 hours of daily
teaching and a mandatory 2 hours of daily self-study.
Parents who lack a
private admissions counselor have the option to attend a one hour “Know the SAT
/ Understanding College Admissions” seminar the first Sunday of every month at
9:15pm eastern. Parents seeking to
enroll their children for an upcoming class or for private tutoring, with the
instructor coming to the home (or conducting tutoring by phone), can e-mail info@ivybound.net.