Preparing for the SAT does not have to be overwhelming. With the right structure and a clear week-by-week plan, your child can walk into test day confident, prepared, and scoring in the range their target colleges expect.
This guide gives you a complete 12-week SAT study plan written for parents. It covers how to set up the preparation, what to focus on each week, how to use practice tests effectively, and what to do if the score is not moving fast enough. You can adapt the timeline if your child has more or less than 12 weeks before their test date.
Before You Start: The Two Things That Must Happen First
Before beginning any SAT preparation, two things need to be in place. Skipping either one makes the rest of the preparation less effective.
- Take a full diagnostic practice test.
Your child needs a real starting point. Have them take a complete official Digital SAT practice test under timed conditions before doing anything else. This gives you an accurate baseline composite score and section scores, and tells you exactly which areas need the most work.
The College Board offers free official Digital SAT practice tests through their Bluebook app. This is the same platform used for the real test, so it also helps your child get familiar with the interface.
- Set a target score.
Look up the SAT middle 50% range for the colleges your child is most seriously considering. The upper end of that range becomes the target. Knowing the gap between the baseline and the target tells you how intensive the preparation needs to be and whether 12 weeks is enough time.
If the gap is more than 250 points, 12 weeks of self-study alone may not be sufficient and structured tutoring will produce better results in the available time. Our SAT tutoring programs can help you assess the right approach for your child’s specific situation.
The 12-Week SAT Study Plan
Here is the complete week-by-week breakdown. Each phase builds on the previous one, moving from foundation-building through to test-ready performance.
| Week | Focus Area | What to Do |
| Week 1 | Diagnostic and Planning | Take full practice test. Score it. Review every missed question. Identify the two lowest-scoring areas. Set target score. Build weekly study schedule. |
| Week 2 | Reading and Writing Foundations | Review Digital SAT Reading and Writing question types. Focus on: information and ideas questions, craft and structure questions, grammar rules. Complete one timed Reading and Writing module. |
| Week 3 | Math Foundations | Review core algebra topics: linear equations, systems of equations, inequalities. Complete one timed Math module. Identify which algebra topics are causing the most errors. |
| Week 4 | Reading and Writing — Deeper Work | Focus on the question types missed most in Week 2. Practice expression of ideas and standard English conventions questions. Complete a second full Reading and Writing section timed. |
| Week 5 | Math — Advanced Topics | Move into advanced math: quadratics, functions, and exponential equations. Complete two timed Math modules. Track which question types are still missed. |
| Week 6 | First Full Practice Test | Take a complete official Digital SAT practice test. Score it. Compare results to the Week 1 diagnostic. Note which sections improved and which did not. Adjust the remaining plan based on results. |
| Week 7 | Targeted Section Work | Double down on the section showing the least improvement. Use official practice questions focused on the specific question types causing errors. Do not move on until error rate drops. |
| Week 8 | Reading and Writing — Pacing | Focus on pacing within the Reading and Writing section. Practice completing each module within the time limit. Work on not spending too long on any single question. |
| Week 9 | Math — Problem Solving and Data | Focus on problem-solving and data analysis questions: ratios, percentages, unit conversion, data interpretation. These appear consistently on the Digital SAT and are highly learnable. |
| Week 10 | Second Full Practice Test | Take another complete practice test. Track the trend across all three scores (Week 1, Week 6, Week 10). Scores should be improving. If not, review the preparation approach with a tutor. |
| Week 11 | Final Targeted Review | Identify the top three question types still causing errors. Focus all study time on those specific areas. No new topics in this week. Consolidate what has been learned. |
| Week 12 | Test Readiness and Logistics | Take one final short practice session mid-week. Confirm test center location and arrival time. Review test day logistics: acceptable ID, calculator policy, Bluebook app setup. Rest the day before the test. |
How to Approach Each SAT Section
The Digital SAT has two sections: Reading and Writing, and Math. Each section has two modules. Here is what your child needs to know about approaching each one strategically.
Reading and Writing
The Digital SAT Reading and Writing section tests four main skill areas: information and ideas, craft and structure, expression of ideas, and standard English conventions. Most of the questions are short passages followed by one question, which is a significant change from the old long-passage format.
- Read the question before reading the passage. This tells your child what to look for and prevents wasting time re-reading.
- The correct answer is always supported by the text. Train your child to find the specific sentence or phrase that justifies the answer before selecting it.
- Grammar questions test a consistent set of rules: comma usage, semicolon usage, subject-verb agreement, pronoun reference, and transition words. Learning these rules produces fast score gains.
- The adaptive format means the second module is harder if your child performs well on the first. This is actually a positive sign — it means they are on track for a higher section score.
Math
The Math section covers algebra, advanced math, problem-solving and data analysis, and geometry and trigonometry. A calculator is allowed throughout the entire section, which removes one of the biggest time pressures from the old format.
- Algebra and advanced math make up the majority of the questions. These two areas should receive the most preparation time for most students.
- Problem-solving and data analysis questions involve interpreting tables, graphs, and word problems. These are highly learnable and respond quickly to targeted practice.
- Geometry and trigonometry appear in smaller numbers but can include hard questions. Students targeting scores above 700 in Math need to be comfortable with these topics.
- Many questions can be solved by plugging in numbers or working backward from the answer choices. These strategies save time and reduce algebraic errors.
How to Use Practice Tests Effectively
Practice tests are the most powerful SAT preparation tool available. The 12-week plan above includes two full practice tests at weeks 6 and 10, with a diagnostic at week 1. Here is how to get the most out of each one.
- Always use official Digital SAT practice tests from the College Board Bluebook app. These reflect the exact format, difficulty, and adaptive structure of the real test. Third-party tests do not replicate the adaptive experience accurately.
- Take every practice test in one sitting, fully timed, with no breaks beyond the official 10-minute break between sections. The goal is to simulate real test conditions exactly.
- Score the test immediately after finishing and review every missed question the same day while the reasoning is still fresh.
- Categorize every missed question by type. Over time, patterns emerge. If your child consistently misses questions about transitions in Reading and Writing and linear equations in Math, those are the preparation priorities.
- Track the scores across all three practice tests. A score that is not improving between Week 1 and Week 6 is a signal to change the preparation approach, not to simply practice more of the same thing.
Adjusting the Plan for Different Timelines
Not every student has 12 weeks. Here is how to adapt the plan based on the time available:
| Timeline | Recommended Approach | Key Adjustments |
| 4 to 6 weeks | Accelerated prep | Focus only on the two weakest sections. Take one practice test per week. Prioritize question types that appear most frequently. Consider our SAT Accelerated Program for expert-guided intensive prep. |
| 6 to 8 weeks | Condensed plan | Compress the 12-week plan by combining weeks 2 and 3, weeks 4 and 5, and weeks 7 and 8. Keep both full practice tests. |
| 12 weeks | Full plan | Follow the 12-week plan as written. Take all three practice tests. Allow time for deep review after each test. |
| 16 or more weeks | Extended plan | Spread the plan over more weeks and add additional section-specific practice in weeks 7 to 10. Take a third full practice test around week 13. More time allows for thorough mastery of harder question types. |
For students with 4 to 6 weeks before their test date, our SAT Accelerated Program delivers focused, intensive preparation in a compressed timeline with a certified tutor guiding every session.
The Parent’s Role in SAT Preparation
SAT preparation does not happen in isolation. Parents who are actively involved in the process without adding pressure produce better outcomes for their children. Here is how to be helpful without being counterproductive.
- Set up the study environment. A consistent, quiet place for study sessions with no phone distractions makes preparation more effective. Phones should be out of reach during study time, not just on silent.
- Track the schedule, not the content. Your child needs to know you are paying attention to whether they are studying, not sitting over them correcting their work. Check in on whether they completed the week’s plan, not whether they got every practice question right.
- Celebrate progress, not just scores. A 50-point improvement from Week 1 to Week 6 is real progress worth acknowledging. Focusing only on whether the final score hits the target adds pressure without helping preparation.
- Know when to bring in expert help. If the score is not improving after 3 to 4 weeks of consistent preparation, or if your child is struggling to stay on schedule independently, a certified tutor will produce faster results than continuing the same approach alone.
When to Choose a Tutor Over Self-Study
Self-study works for students who are disciplined, have a clear understanding of which areas to focus on, and are making measurable progress. A tutor is the better choice in these situations:
- The score gap between the current composite and the target is 200 points or more.
- Your child has taken the SAT once or twice without meaningful improvement.
- One section is significantly lower than the other and targeted self-study has not moved it.
- Your child’s test date is within 6 weeks and the score is still below the target range.
- Your child struggles to maintain a consistent study schedule without external accountability.
Our SAT Full Program includes 30 one-on-one sessions with a certified SAT tutor, starting with a diagnostic to identify exactly where points are being lost. For students who need flexibility, our SAT Individual Hourly Program and SAT Group Program offer alternative formats to suit different schedules and budgets.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should my child study for the SAT each week?
For a 12-week plan, 5 to 8 hours per week is realistic and effective for most students. Shorter, focused sessions of 60 to 90 minutes are more productive than long unfocused sessions. Consistency over time matters more than total hours in a single week.
What are the best SAT study materials?
The most reliable materials are official Digital SAT practice tests from the College Board Bluebook app. These are free and reflect the exact format of the real test. Supplement with a quality prep book that is specifically written for the Digital SAT format.
How many practice tests should my child take?
For a 12-week plan, three full practice tests are included: a diagnostic at the start, a progress check at week 6, and a readiness test at week 10. Students with more time can add a fourth test around week 13.
Is 12 weeks enough time to prepare for the SAT?
For most students, 12 weeks of consistent preparation produces meaningful improvement. Students with a gap of more than 250 points from their target, or those who are starting from a very low baseline, may benefit from a longer timeline or a more intensive program.
Should my child take the SAT or ACT?
Both tests are accepted by all major colleges. The right choice depends on which test format suits your child’s strengths. Students who are stronger in math and science sometimes prefer the ACT. Students who read quickly and process information efficiently sometimes prefer the Digital SAT’s shorter format. Taking a practice test for each is the most reliable way to decide.
What score should my child aim for on the SAT?
The target score should be at or above the upper end of the middle 50% range for your child’s most selective target college. Look this up on each school’s common data set, available on their admissions website.
Can my child retake the SAT if the score is not high enough?
Yes. Most colleges superscore the SAT, meaning they take the highest section scores from different test dates and combine them into a new composite. A strategic retake after targeted preparation on the lower section can significantly improve the superscored result.
How do I know if my child is making enough progress?
Compare practice test scores at Week 1, Week 6, and Week 10. A student who is improving by 50 to 100 points between each test is on track. If scores are flat after 6 weeks of consistent preparation, the preparation approach should be reviewed with a qualified tutor.
Ready to Start Your Child’s SAT Preparation?
At Blackmon Tutoring, our certified SAT tutors work one-on-one with your child to build a preparation plan based on their specific baseline, target score, and test date. We serve students in Texas, Georgia, California, Florida, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and New York, with both in-home and online options available.
Explore our SAT tutoring programs, view our SAT Full Program, or get a quote to find the right option for your child’s goals and schedule.
Twelve weeks. A clear plan. The right support. That is how scores improve.



