If you want to improve your SAT Math score by 20 to 50 points, listen to this advice. The SAT often repeats question types because it does not have time to create completely new ones. This means a question you saw in October could appear again on the November test. The best way to increase your score is to memorize and understand these repeated question types. However, I would not recommend focusing on memorizing questions during the SAT you are currently taking. Your main goal should be to get as many questions correct as possible in the first module so you can unlock the harder second module. In the hard second module, if you hit a wall—where question after question feels unfamiliar and you cannot solve five or six of them—that can drop your score into the 650s. You might feel like you need to retake the SAT, and that is fine. But if you remember the kinds of questions that appeared on this test, write them down immediately afterward. That way, you have the data to study from. By doing this, when you take your next SAT, you will have trained yourself on the exact types of questions you struggled with. If those questions appear again, you will know how to solve them this time, even if you couldn’t last time.