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Overview THE PRINCETON REVIEW GETS RESULTS. Get all the prep you need to ace the TOEFL with a full-length simulated TOEFL iBT test, an MP3 CD with accompanying audio sections, thorough reviews of core topics, and proven strategies for tackling tough questions.
'Techniques That Actually Work.' Tried-and-true strategies to avoid traps and beat the test Tips for pacing yourself and guessing logically when needed Essential tactics to help you work smarter, not harder 'Everything You Need to Know for a High Score.'

Comprehensive content reviews for all test topics Lessons on how to quickly identify the main ideas of a passage or lecture Grammar review to brush up on the basics ' 'Practice Your Way to Perfection.' 1 full-length simulated TOEFL iBT with full answer explanations Accompanying audio sections available both on CD and as streaming files online 39 additional practice drills for the Speaking, Listening, Reading, and Writing sections'.
By on March 12, 2014 in, First, let me say that the title of really bothers me. The TOEFL cannot be “cracked.” You can prepare for it, yes, but you cannot learn some quick tips and tricks to get a high score. This is a mostly a test of your English experience. I know, I know—that’s the title of all Princeton Review’s books.
Deadpool Keygen For Mac on this page. That makes it worse, in some ways, because no test is as simple as the title implies. But it’s especially a problem for the TOEFL, in my opinion.
I don’t mean that there are no test-taking strategies or TOEFL-specific tips you should learn. But to say that they’ll help you to “crack” the test is an exaggeration or, worse, a lie. But that’s just the title. What about the actual book? TOEFL Practice Material Most TOEFL iBT books on the market rely on the number of practice questions and tests to be popular.
With that in mind, it’s deeply surprising to me that Princeton Review doesn’t seem to care. In fact, they seem proud of having little practice material: there’s a huge “1” on the front cover. No, not to mean that they’re “number 1,” the best, but to mean that they only have one practice test in the book! For context, includes three practice tests, comes with seven practice tests, and has five. But what exactly is there one of?
The cover says it’s a “full-length simulated TOEFL iBT test.” Well, that’s almost right. There’s only a paper practice test in the book; there’s no CD, no computer-based practice test. That’s not a very good simulation. So if you’re a careful buyer, you might be thinking that there’s a lot of other practice material in the book not in the full-length test format. That would be similar to. And that’s partly true; there are other practice questions in the skill-building and test-strategy sections of the book. But still, there are too few.
For example, there are 14 reading passages total in this book. By way of comparison, The Complete Guide has around 40. Okay, so the quantity isn’t enough. What about the quality of these questions? If the practice is perfect, then it might still be worth the money. Most of the reading passages and questions are very close to the test, but many are too easy, and a few have clear, serious problems.
Some have “wrong” answer choices that are arguably correct. These are especially common in the “Cracking the Reading Section” part of the book. For example, the first example of a vocabulary question looks like this: 1. The word feasibility as used in the passage is closest in meaning to (A) appropriateness (B) reasonableness (C) possibility (D) viability Answer choice (C) is too close to the actual definition of the word.
Yes, “viability” is a better match, but you could plug in “possibility” to the passage and have basically the same meaning. That’s not very TOEFL-like. Meanwhile, the recordings for the listening parts are much too fast on average and filled with idioms. The TOEFL does test idioms, and sometimes there are a few fast sentences, but real TOEFL lectures have more small pauses and rephrasing. Cracking the TOEFL iBT’s recordings are too difficult.