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SAT 3-Month Preparation Plan for Indian Students: Week-by-Week Guide

· Nisha Bajpai · 6 min read

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Three months is enough time to meaningfully move your SAT score — I’ve watched it happen repeatedly with my students. A student who walked into her first session scoring 1180 walked out of her test date six months later with a 1460. But the magic wasn’t in the number of hours she studied. It was in the structure.

When I work with Indian students preparing for the SAT, the first thing I tell them is this: structure matters more than hours. I’ve seen students who studied four hours a day for two months barely move their scores, while others who studied 90 focused minutes a day for three months crossed the 1400 mark. The difference is always what happened during those hours — not how many there were.

Here is the exact week-by-week plan I give my students when we have twelve weeks to work with.

Start Here: Diagnostic Test First

Before you open a single prep book, take a full-length official practice test on College Board Bluebook. Do it timed, in one sitting, with no breaks beyond what the real test allows. This is your baseline.

Once you have your score, set a realistic target. If you’re starting at 1100, aiming for 1400 in twelve weeks is aggressive but possible. If you’re starting at 1300, 1480–1520 is a reasonable stretch. Write your target score down. Keep it visible.

Weeks 1–2: Diagnosis and Foundations

Don’t start studying content yet. Spend these two weeks understanding your diagnostic results deeply. Which question types did you miss most in Reading and Writing? Where did your Math break down — Algebra, Advanced Math, Geometry? Were your errors careless mistakes or genuine gaps?

This analysis tells you where your time is worth spending. Most Indian students I work with are stronger in Math and weaker in the Reading and Writing section — specifically in inference-heavy reading comprehension and rhetorical analysis questions. Knowing this early means you can allocate your time accordingly.

In these two weeks, also build your study schedule. I recommend five days a week, 60–90 minutes per session. Consistency beats intensity every time.

Weeks 3–5: Core Skills

Now you begin targeted skill-building. Work on the specific question types where you lost the most points. If your RW score was weak, focus here: Command of Evidence questions require you to find the claim that a piece of data supports — this is a learnable skill. Words in Context questions are not vocabulary tests; they test whether you understand how a word functions in a sentence.

For Math, work through the domains where you dropped points. If Algebra is strong but Advanced Math is weak, don’t spend equal time on both.

Use Khan Academy’s Official SAT Prep during this phase. It is free, it is tied directly to your College Board diagnostic results, and it gives you targeted practice on the exact question types you’re missing. I recommend 30–45 minutes on Khan Academy per day during this phase, in addition to concept review.

Milestone check at the end of Week 5: take another full Bluebook practice test. You should see a 30–50 point improvement on your total score. If you don’t, revisit your error log — are you actually understanding your mistakes, or just moving past them?

Weeks 6–9: Practice and Refinement

This is the longest phase and the most important one. You are no longer building skills — you are sharpening them through repetition and review.

Take one full-length practice test per week, every week. After each test, spend as much time reviewing your errors as you spent taking the test. I’m serious about this. A student who takes eight tests and reviews none of them will not improve as much as a student who takes four tests and reviews every single wrong answer.

For each wrong answer, ask yourself three questions: What was the question asking? Why did I choose what I chose? What should I have done instead?

During this phase, also time yourself on individual sections. Speed is a skill, and the digital SAT moves quickly. If you’re consistently running out of time in the Reading and Writing module, you need timed drills — not just full tests.

Weeks 10–12: Test Readiness

In the final three weeks, you are not learning anything new. This is a critical rule. Students who try to cram new content in the final weeks often see their scores drop, because they’ve disrupted their mental model of what they know.

Take two more full-length Bluebook tests during this phase. Review errors, but lightly — you’re maintaining confidence, not building new skills. In the final week before the test, do light practice only: 20–30 minutes per day of question types you feel comfortable with.

The night before the test: no studying. Rest, sleep, prepare your documents.

Resources to Use

Keep it simple. The two resources I recommend above all others are:

College Board Bluebook: All official full-length practice tests live here. These are the most accurate representation of what you’ll see on test day. Do all of them.

Khan Academy Official SAT Prep: Free, personalised, and directly connected to your College Board data. There is no better free resource.

Beyond these two, you may supplement with one prep book — I like The Princeton Review for concept explanations — but don’t spread yourself across five different resources.

Common Mistakes That Kill Scores

Studying topics instead of question types. The SAT is not a content test — it’s a reasoning test. Memorising every grammar rule doesn’t help if you don’t know how the SAT tests grammar. Learn the question types, not just the content.

Not reviewing errors. Moving on after a wrong answer is the single biggest mistake I see. The error log is where your improvement lives.

Skipping full timed tests. Doing practice questions in untimed sets doesn’t prepare your brain for the pressure of a real test. Take full tests, timed, every week from Week 6 onwards.

Twelve weeks of structured, consistent preparation is genuinely enough to make a significant difference. I’ve seen it work over and over again.

If you’d like help building your personalised plan — including figuring out which question types to prioritise and which tests to register for — I’d love to help. Book a free 30-minute session with me and we’ll map out your SAT preparation together.

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