One of the biggest mistakes SAT students make is practicing random math problems without direction. While practice is important, it’s not enough—you need to target your weak areas. That’s where RevisionDojo’s Math Bank comes in.
Instead of guessing what to study, the Math Bank gives you structured practice sets designed to strengthen the exact skills holding you back.
Quick Start Checklist
- Identify your weakest math topics.
- Select targeted drills from the Math Bank.
- Track your performance over time.
- Rotate between weak areas and mixed sets.
- Revisit tough problems until they’re mastered.
Why Targeting Weak Skills Matters
The SAT doesn’t reward perfection—it rewards efficiency. If you’re strong in algebra but weak in geometry, every minute spent drilling algebra is wasted potential. By targeting weaknesses, you:
- Eliminate repeated errors.
- Build confidence in problem areas.
- Raise your overall score faster.
- Make prep time more efficient.
For formulas that support weak-area review, see the Top 50 Must-Know SAT Math Formulas in 2025.
How RevisionDojo’s Math Bank Works
The Math Bank organizes SAT problems by topic and difficulty. This means you can:
- Drill algebra patterns (linear equations, quadratics, systems).
- Focus on geometry (triangles, circles, volumes).
- Sharpen data analysis (statistics, probability, ratios).
- Mix practice sets to build stamina.
By practicing in small, focused sets, you’ll strengthen weak spots without burning out.
Step 1: Identify Weak Skills
Start by reviewing a practice test. Circle every missed problem and label it: algebra, geometry, statistics, or word problems.
Step 2: Select Targeted Drills
Once you know your weak areas, choose drill sets from the Math Bank that align with them. Example: if you missed multiple probability questions, pull a probability drill set. For faster strategies, review How to Solve AP Statistics Probability Questions Fast.
Step 3: Rotate Daily
Don’t drill the same skill endlessly. Rotate between weaknesses and mixed practice so you’re improving weak spots while reinforcing strengths.
For memory-heavy areas like formulas, use the same methods outlined in How to Memorize AP Statistics Formulas in One Week.
Step 4: Track and Reflect
Keep a notebook or digital log where you write:
- Problem type missed
- Cause of mistake (misread, concept gap, time issue)
- Correction strategy
This reflection ensures weaknesses actually turn into strengths.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. How often should I use the Math Bank?
Ideally, 3–5 times per week. Each session should last 20–30 minutes.
2. Should I only focus on weak skills?
No—balance is important. Spend 60% of your time on weaknesses and 40% reinforcing strengths.
3. How do I know if I’ve mastered a weak skill?
If you can consistently solve 5–7 practice problems in a row without error, that skill is ready to move into maintenance mode.
4. What if I have multiple weak areas?
Rotate daily. For example: Monday (geometry), Tuesday (probability), Wednesday (algebra). This avoids burnout and builds balanced mastery.
5. Why use RevisionDojo’s Math Bank instead of random practice?
Because it’s organized and intentional. Random practice may feel productive, but it doesn’t guarantee improvement. The Math Bank targets your exact weaknesses, which is the fastest way to raise your score.
Conclusion
The fastest way to raise your SAT Math score is by targeting weak areas—not practicing blindly. RevisionDojo’s Math Bank makes this easy by providing structured, topic-based drills that eliminate repeated mistakes and build long-term mastery.
Don’t just practice harder. Practice smarter—with RevisionDojo.