If I had to recommend one resource for high school students preparing for college entrance exams, it would be "PWN the SAT: Math Guide" by Mike McClenney. Most students have never heard of it because it doesn't have the marketing budget of Kaplan or Princeton Review. I discovered this book when I was doing research on cognitive methods of exam preparation and what immediately caught my eye was the way it approaches the problem. Most prep books reteach high school math as if the issue is that students don't know the content. PWN presumes that you are already familiar with the math and is all about why you continue to get questions wrong. A far more truthful place to begin, if I have to be honest. It is not about mathematical ability that most students hit a ceiling on SAT math, no matter how much they practice. It is that the SAT writes questions in a way that it assumes students will take shortcuts in their thinking when they are in a hurry and under pressure. McClenney breaks down exactly how those traps work, which answer choices the test writers plant to catch students who set up the problem correctly but rush the final step & how to slow down your thinking in precisely the right places without losing time overall. Once you understand the test's logic at that level, the math section will stop feeling unpredictable. Students who level off at a specific score despite repeated practice nearly always have a strategy problem, rather than a knowledge problem and that is what this book is constructed on completely.
My background is in behavior change, but I've seen that apps like Brilliant or Mathway keep students interested. It feels like solving real problems instead of memorizing. When I help clients study, these gamified apps make them show up more often. If you are prepping for exams, I suggest using a practice app alongside a regular textbook. It balances everything out. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Started switching between paper workbooks and apps like Brainscape a couple of years ago. Big game changer. I started to not get bored and identify my weak spots much sooner. You might want to consider getting a couple of different formats and switching between them for a week or two. Simply keep the one that prevents you from procrastinating. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
If you're in high school in the US/UK and trying to get better at maths for college entrance exams, the key is keeping it simple and consistent rather than using too many resources. For books, stick with something that builds strong basics and practice, GCSE or A-level maths guides (like CGP books in the UK) or SAT/ACT prep books in the US are solid because they're straight to the point and exam-focused. If you want to improve how you think about problems, How to Solve It by George Polya is surprisingly helpful. For apps, Khan Academy is one of the best, it's free, easy to follow, and covers everything step by step. If you get stuck on questions, Photomath can help you understand the process instead of just giving answers. And if maths feels boring sometimes, using something like Prodigy or simple puzzle games can actually help you stay consistent without feeling like you're studying all the time. The main thing is not to overload yourself, pick one book, one app, and stick with it. Doing a bit every day matters way more than trying everything at once.
I am an eye doctor, not a math teacher, but I know picking the right tools matters. I have always done better using resources from people who actually know their stuff. You should look for apps or games that actual math teachers recommend. It takes a little time to find what clicks, but it pays off. Honestly, just ask a teacher or college prep group for their best picks. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
I usually focus on Japanese products, but I've noticed kids buying puzzle books to help with math. One student told me a Sudoku app actually helped her logic on exams. It seems like mixing standard workbooks with those games keeps them focused better. That combo might be the best way to prep without getting bored. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Even though I work in orthodontics, I know how tough it is to master a difficult subject. For math prep, students usually do best with straightforward resources like Khan Academy or official ACT books. In my experience, the simple tools are the ones that actually work. Stick to resources that build good habits instead of the ones with flashy features. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Whenever I research high school prep, people always mention "The Art of Problem Solving" books and Photomath. Honestly, using both is the way to go. You get the speed and accuracy from the practice, but switching between a text and an app keeps it from getting boring. It covers everything without feeling like a total grind. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
I work with cars, but I know you need good tools for math. My friends used Barron's Math Workbook for exams and Photomath to get unstuck on hard problems. If you like interactive stuff, the puzzles on Brilliant.org are actually fun. Just stick with whatever keeps you awake and covers the topics you need. Boring study sessions never work anyway. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Founder & Medical Director, Board-Certified OB/GYN & Reproductive Endocrinologist at Aurea Fertility Center
Answered 19 days ago
My background is in medicine, but I've learned that you have to keep studying to get good at hard things. High schoolers should try ACT prep books or apps like Desmos. They actually make math easier to handle. Don't just memorize formulas. Pick tools that make you curious and push you to solve the problem yourself. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Every week, I analyze return rates, freight cost ratios, and conversion percentages. That is the exact math college entrance exam, and most students never practice it. They spend months on quadratic equations. The SAT data section beats them anyway. Two resources that actually train this: UWorld SAT Math for realistic data questions, and simply reading one business report weekly and calculating the numbers yourself. The exam rewards applied numeracy. Train for what it actually asks.
For most high school students prepping for SAT/ACT math and strengthening fundamentals, I've found the highest ROI comes from a tight mix of (a) problem sets with solutions you can audit, (b) spaced repetition for formulas, and (c) timed practice. In books, the Art of Problem Solving series (Intro to Algebra, Geometry, etc.) is excellent for building real problem-solving habits, while official SAT/ACT prep books are the most faithful for exam-style pacing and traps. For broader skill-building, a standard precalculus or algebra text with lots of end-of-section problems (and an answer key) helps students learn to self-correct. On apps and games, our team generally favors tools that give immediate feedback and let you target weak skills: Khan Academy for structured mastery, Desmos for graph intuition, and a spaced-repetition flashcard app (like Anki) for formulas and common identities. For "game-like" practice, I'd look for platforms that adapt difficulty and show your error patterns over time (what you missed, why, and how often), because in our experience the learning comes less from points and more from closing specific gaps repeatedly under mild time pressure.
President, Manufacturing Leader, Soap & Cleaning Product Expert, Business Growth Strategist at Wynbert Soapmasters Inc
Answered 15 days ago
From my educational experience in finance and economic development, I learned that people don't just magically come to know how to use math. It is something that takes a consistent effort of using the proper tools and repetition until you become fluent in it. The one series of books I've been telling everyone about is "The Art of Problem Solving Series". These books provide students with a starting point for solving problems rather than providing students with the solution and requiring them to memorize it. Because of this approach, the students have more trouble solving problems that they encounter on exams because those problems do not look like the problems they have practiced solving. And in the case of apps, the best free option is still the Khan Academy. It is based on actual College Board content, and so students are tested on what the test would look like. Here's the part that most people never address, though. Students do not tend to perform poorly due to missing the content. The reason they underperform is that they simply ran out of time and only timed drills can actually resolve that issue. I would recommend that you establish that habit early and the exam does not become something that is against you.
Competitive gamers calculate win probabilities and resource optimization every session. They just don't call it math. Working in gaming, I watch players engage with percentage stats, cooldown ratios, and inventory cost management daily. The mathematical thinking already exists. It needs a bridge to formal notation. Opus Magnum builds genuine algebraic reasoning through gameplay. Brilliant.org's probability modules speak the language gamers already use. The skill is already there. Label it correctly, and exam prep becomes natural.
I recommend prioritizing AI-powered tutoring platforms and gamified learning apps as the best resources for high school students preparing for college entrance exams. These tools scale well, improve accessibility, and can be tailored to an individual's learning style, which helps focus practice on weak areas. Look for platforms that make practice interactive and game-like to maintain engagement and motivation. Schools and colleges can integrate these solutions to expand access and support sustained exam preparation.
Rather than naming specific books or apps, I recommend the structured study-group system I run to prepare students for college entrance math. We begin with a shared exam blueprint checklist so everyone knows which topics to cover and use five-minute teach-backs where each person explains one concept. I build active-recall quiz decks, tag every miss by objective, and use a short error log template so students track why they missed questions and how to fix them. Before test week we hold a timed mock and provide a concise formula and definition sheet for final review.
Even though I work in finance, I get a kick out of tools that make learning stick, like Princeton Review books or Lumosity logic games. A friend's kid was terrified of exams until he started using them daily, and suddenly the tests didn't seem so bad. Combining actual study with these games really helps prep for college and makes math feel way less scary. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to my personal email
Every electrician calculates voltage drop, load capacity, and circuit sizing daily. Get it wrong and buildings fail inspection or worse. Young apprentices who passed coursework still struggle applying algebra to real panel calculations under pressure. The gap isn't knowledge. It's transfer. Ugly's Electrical References paired with Khan Academy algebra modules fixes this. Work real electrical values through the formulas not abstract variables. Math learned through real consequences transfers to exam conditions faster than any drill book.
LLM Psychologist / Fractional Business & AI Workflow Consultant
Answered 20 days ago
Math books, apps, or games only help if they match the exam and the student's level. I would start with official tools first: Bluebook practice tests, the SAT Student Question Bank, and Official SAT Prep on Khan Academy for SAT students, or ACT's free practice tests and the official guide for ACT students. Then I would add one depth resource, like Art of Problem Solving for stronger algebra and problem solving, and one interactive tool, like Desmos or Brilliant, to build speed and confidence. The practical takeaway is simple: make one official tool your core, use one book to fill knowledge gaps, and treat games as support, not the main event.
I run charter bus operations across Australia. Route scheduling requires mental math under deadline pressure not perfect calculation, but fast enough estimation to make decisions in real time. That pressure-math skill is exactly what timed college entrance exams test. Most prep tools train accuracy. Almost no train speed under pressure. One method that works: solve past exam problems with a timer set 20% shorter than the allowed time. Then check the answers. The pressure recalibrates how your brain processes numbers. No app teaches this. You have to build it deliberately.