Study Plans · study plan

    2-Week SAT Study Plan

    Two weeks is short, so the plan must be narrow. The goal is to fix the highest-value misses, not relearn the entire test.

    14-day schedule

    Use one diagnostic, targeted daily drills, and two timed tests.

    • Day 1: diagnostic and error log
    • Days 2-5: weakest Math and grammar skills
    • Day 6: timed modules
    • Day 7: review
    • Days 8-11: second weakest skills
    • Day 12: full practice
    • Day 13: review only
    • Day 14: light warmup

    What to skip

    Skip low-frequency topics and huge content overhauls. Focus on mistakes you can actually fix before test day.

    How to turn this plan into practice

    A study plan only works if each block turns into a question set, a timed module, or a review session. Keep the schedule narrow enough that you can finish the work and review it.

    • Start each week with one target skill in Math and one in Reading and Writing.
    • Use timed modules to test whether skill drills transfer under pressure.
    • Review misses before adding more new questions.

    How to know whether the plan is working

    Do not judge a study plan by hours logged. Judge it by whether your miss pattern changes after each week.

    • Track misses by skill, not just by section score.
    • Repeat missed questions 48 hours later before adding more new drills.
    • Use one timed module each week as the transfer test.
    • If the same mistake appears twice, make the next drill narrower.

    Practice this on 1600.now

    FAQs

    Can I improve my SAT score in two weeks?

    Yes, especially by fixing careless errors, pacing, punctuation, and common algebra patterns.

    How many hours per day should I study?

    Plan for 1.5-3 focused hours per day if you only have two weeks.

    Keep working

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