Craft & Structure
The most question-dense domain on the test. Words in Context alone accounts for the highest frequency of any single question type — learn to read for context, not definition.
Built by an 800 perfect math scorer. Every strategy, every trick, every resource. Free. No exceptions. No upsell. Free forever.
10 modules · 60+ topics
The most question-dense domain on the test. Words in Context alone accounts for the highest frequency of any single question type — learn to read for context, not definition.
Command of Evidence is the trickiest question type for most students. Learn to identify strong inferences, central ideas, and how supporting details actually support.
Rhetorical Synthesis and Transitions are pattern-recognition questions. Once you learn the patterns, these become the fastest points on the test.
Four punctuation rules cover almost every grammar question on the SAT. Learn those four rules and you pick up easy points every time.
Process of elimination, time management, annotation techniques. The meta-skills that separate 650 scorers from 750+ scorers.
Linear equations, systems, and inequalities. The foundation of the entire math section. Master these and everything else gets easier.
Quadratics, exponentials, and function transformations. Taught with Desmos strategies so you solve them faster than by hand.
Ratios, percentages, scatterplots, and probability. The category where most students lose points to careless mistakes — learn to be precise.
Area, volume, right triangles, and circles. The smallest math category on the test but still worth knowing cold.
The graphing calculator is built into the test. Learn Desmos tricks and you solve problems in seconds that would take minutes by hand. This is the strategy that separates good math scorers from perfect ones.

the person behind unbarred
I scored a 1550 on the SAT. 800 on math. 750 on reading and writing. Not because I had a private tutor or paid for a prep course, but because I figured out how the test works and studied it systematically.
The problem is that most students never get the chance to figure that out. That information exists. It has always existed. It just costs money to access it.
That is what Unbarred is about. Not charity. Just removing a barrier that should never have existed in the first place.