What Smart Girls Know About the SAT: How to Beat the Gender Gap
Books / Paperback
Books › Study Aids › General
ISBN: 074324768X / Publisher: Kaplan Publishing, August 2003
Discusses the gender gap that exists on the SAT, explaining why girls generally average lower scores on the exam than boys, and offers a series of strategies, reviews, exercises, and tutorials designed to help women.
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So, girls, you want to get ready for the SAT? You stand there, looking aimlessly at the dozens of test prep guides on the shelf. And this one caught your eye. Maybe you liked the title. Maybe it was the pink cover. Excuse the color choice, but we needed to get your attention. We've got an important message: The SAT experience is biased against females. On average, girls do not score as high as boys do on the SAT, though on nearly every other scale, girls show themselves to be as capable -- even more capable -- than boys. The bias is ingrained in the design of the test, but there are things you can do to even the scales. Things like setting up an all-girl study group, learning to think the way the test makers think, and mastering all-purpose strategies that make the most of your female brain. That's what this book is all about. That -- and a higher score.
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