Paid around $1.5K though my dad was able to get a discount down to $1.2K because he said my bro would be taking other classes there (which hewill this summer) i guess it's effective.it'll raise your score by at least 150 points for sure (if you are scoring under 2000).however it's really up to you. I studied on my own too using SAT books like PR and stuff.I think if I just stuck to Elite, I wouldn't have hit in the 2200 and 2300 range. WHen you study on your own, you find your own pace and can really internalize your strengths and weaknesses. Some of the content Elite teaches is sometimes out of the box and has nothing to do with the SAT content. The practice tests are a lot harder than the real SAT test so I guess they overprepare you but this can sometimes be in a wrong sense since all their tests are custom made and not as standardized as the SAT, so the format may jump you off a bit if you don't take any real SAT tests.personally though, just save the $1.5K and study on your own. However, the practice tests and critical reading passages that Elite provides are definitely exploitable for your own use IMO. I was going to pay the $$$$ and have my dtr take the SAT Prep course in my area.
Elite Educational Institute's vision is to provide students with a challenging academic. 2100 Plus Program, ACT Prep, SAT Subject Test Prep, AP Exam Prep, College.
But being on the site I found folks talking about the 'Xiggi' method. Which I thought was a set of books/website/brick and morter SAT prep school. LOL silly me. Rapidshare Rapidleech 2012 Electoral Votes. I googled it and went to B&N/Amazon and came up with nada. Which was very frustrating!
I then discovered that Xiggi is a living, breathing, human being with all of this great SAT prep knowledge. He(or she) I am not too sure at this point is a poster here on CC. I even pm'd Xiggi and was given some wonderful advice on self study. Do yourself a favor and look Xiggi up here on CC. And save yourself(lol your parents) a few bucks.
Email This Story Send email to this address Enter Your Name Add a comment here Verification Send Email Cancel “Ericka, you’re staying for writing,” announced Eunice Cho, the assistant director of the Los Angeles Branch of Elite Educational Institute. Sitting with a resigned look in the small classroom, I sighed and picked up my backpack to move to the next room. I had already known about my writing quiz results, so the fact that I had to stay after class to make up a “failed” writing quiz was no surprise. (In my defense, it was still an 80%) As an upcoming junior, my parents had found it to be of utter importance to enroll me in an SAT preparatory class.
