Question-type clarity
You need to know whether a miss came from grammar rules, command of evidence, transitions, rhetorical synthesis, or time pressure.
Strong SAT Reading and Writing prep is not about reading more passages at random. It is about learning how the test frames evidence, grammar, transitions, structure, rhetorical purpose, and data questions, then practicing that logic until it becomes fast and reliable.
You need to know whether a miss came from grammar rules, command of evidence, transitions, rhetorical synthesis, or time pressure.
Good prep teaches a decision process you can repeat under pressure, not just answer keys and vague tips.
You should be able to see which skills are improving and which weak areas still cost you points.
If you want SAT Reading and Writing prep that gives you clearer reasoning, better review, and stronger progress tracking, TestGrind is built to help you improve with more direction.