Practice & error log
Score growth comes from one habit: every wrong answer becomes a one-line lesson, and every lesson gets reviewed before the next drill. This page is the workflow.
Taking a Bluebook full mock
- Schedule it like the real test. Pick a Saturday morning, no phone, no music, real desk, one tab open: Bluebook.
- Use real timing. Don't pause. If you have to stop, the run doesn't count.
- Use scratch paper the way you would on test day. No phone notes, no spreadsheet.
- Submit and record the score immediately, before reviewing. The number is the truth — don't talk yourself out of it.
- Review the same day or next morning while the questions are still fresh.
The review workflow
For every wrong question (and every right question you weren't sure about), do this in order:
- Re-attempt the question with no time limit and no answer key, before reading the explanation. This is the most important step. Half the time, you'll get it now — meaning the error was process, not knowledge.
- If you still get it wrong, read the official explanation slowly. Identify the specific gap (a rule, a formula, a question-type trap).
- If you got it right on the re-attempt, identify what changed: did you slow down? Re-read more carefully? Notice the trap?
- Write a one-line log entry with the failure mode in your own words. See below for format.
- Tag the question type so you can see patterns later.
Error log format
One row per missed question. Keep it in a spreadsheet (Google Sheets is fine). Columns:
| Column | Example |
|---|---|
| Date | 2026-08-14 |
| Source | Bluebook Practice Test 3 |
| Section | Math · Module 2 · Q14 |
| Topic | Quadratics / vertex form |
| Your answer / correct | B / C |
| Why you missed it (≤ 15 words) | Used standard form, forgot vertex = (−b/2a). Should have completed the square. |
| Fix (rule to remember) | For "vertex of parabola" questions, always convert to vertex form first. |
Common failure modes
| Failure mode | Fix |
|---|---|
| Misread the question (e.g. answered "x" when it asked "2x + 1") | Underline the actual ask. Re-read the question stem before picking an answer. |
| Picked a partial answer (true, but doesn't fully satisfy the goal) | For Rhetorical Synthesis and quantitative inference, repeat the stated goal in your head before evaluating choices. |
| Algebra error (sign, distribution, fraction) | Slow down on the algebra step that bit you; redo it twice; use Desmos to verify. |
| Time pressure — guessed at end | Pace differently next time: flag the slow question, don't camp. |
| Knowledge gap (didn't know a rule or formula) | Drill that topic this week. Mark for re-test in 2 weeks. |
| Eliminated the right answer | Re-read the answer choice carefully. The wording might be more conservative than it sounded. |
Weekly topic review
Every Sunday, scan the error log from the past week. Look for repeat topics. The next week's drills target those topics specifically.
- If you missed 3+ "vertex of parabola" questions, do 10 vertex problems Monday.
- If "transitions" came up 4 times, dedicate one drill session to 20 transitions in a row.
- If "comma rules" keeps appearing, spend 30 minutes with a reference and 20 targeted drills.
Repeat topics in the log signal a real gap. Random topics signal pacing / careless errors — different fix.
Spaced re-test
Two weeks after a missed question is logged, do it again from memory. If you get it right, mark "retained." If you miss it again, add a tag and re-test in a week.
This catches the difference between "I understood the explanation" and "I can do this question on a real test under time pressure." They're not the same skill.
Where to draw drills from
- Bluebook full-length tests (6+ free). Use these sparingly — keep at least 2 untouched for late-stage realistic mocks.
- Bluebook practice question bank. Hundreds of standalone questions per domain.
- Khan Academy / College Board Official SAT Practice — generates personalized practice based on your performance.
- Past paper SAT material — useful for math and grammar, but the Reading section is structurally different and less representative.
Don't do these things
- Don't memorize vocabulary lists. The digital SAT doesn't reward isolated vocab study. Words always appear in context.
- Don't take more than 1 full-length mock per week. Mock fatigue degrades the data.
- Don't review only the questions you got wrong. Also review right answers you weren't confident on — those are future wrong answers.
- Don't outsource the review. Watching a YouTube explanation isn't the same as re-deriving the answer yourself.