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Tuesday, August 24, 2004
 

Apart from stealing the test results a la The Perfect Score, movie, preparation and a plan is the best way to go where help is needed.

I want to take the next few weeks or so and focus on how to improve the SAT score. We'll have various resources posted online.

I will be actively working directly with local families and with others around the world through various interactive and online methods to help coach and mentor them to better results. Fees are flexible and we will tie them into the results achieved to a major extent. No major risk on your part. Coaching and the related preparation does improve score results. If you want to explore working with me to improve your SAT score, just drop me a note at "bob@rempelgroup.com" and we'll set up a time to talk on the phone.

Bob Rempel
Winnipeg, Canada
http://www.rempelgroup.com/acethesat/

What's the basis of a great score in the SAT? Can you ace the SAT

Here's a great starting point in understanding what it takes to get a great score. This is from 1600 Perfect Score
The 7 Secrets of Acing the SAT by Tom Fischgrund


So who is the perfect score student?

"If you saw seventeen-year-old Susan D., from South Peoria, Illinois, walking down the street, you would probably say she looks like an all-American girl. She has long, shiny brown hair, freckles splattered across her nose, and brown eyes that sparkle with intelligence. In high school, she did the ordinary kinds of things that most girls her age do -- hanging out with her friends, performing in plays at her small high school, and surfing on her computer. But she also participated in some activities that were more exceptional: heading up her school's Model UN, playing violin in the all-state orchestra, and working four hours a week with residents of a nursing home near where she lived. "The work in the nursing home was probably the most interesting thing I've ever done," Susan says about working with the elderly. "I learned a lot from just listening to those folks -- just asking questions about their lives."

What defines Susan most is her thirst for knowledge. "I'm an extremely curious person who loves seeking out information about the world," she says. "I'm constantly searching to understand myself, those around me, and my place in the universe. I'm someone who is always striving to be the person I want to be, whoever that is."

Susan's curiosity helped her accomplish an extraordinary feat: she got a perfect score on the SAT ..."

Take a look at the book and the reviews by clicking the link above.
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