Nova specializes in the digital SAT math section — both Module 1 and the adaptive Module 2. She knows the Desmos workflow, the 10 question types that appear most often, and the time-per-question budget that actually gets you a 750+.
Pick any area below and Nova will walk you through it at your pace — explaining, asking questions, and checking your work until it clicks.
Linear equations in one and two variables, systems, and linear inequalities. About 13–15 questions per test — Nova starts here if you're below 600.
Quadratics, polynomials, exponential and radical equations, and nonlinear systems. These are where the Module 2 adaptive difficulty spikes.
Ratios, percentages, unit conversions, scatterplots, and two-way tables. Nova teaches you to read the chart before reading the question.
Circles, right-triangle trig, and the unit circle. Small section (5–7 questions), high payoff — Nova drills the formula sheet until it's automatic.
Graphing to backsolve, sliders for parameter estimation, and regression tools. Most students underuse Desmos — Nova shows you when it's actually faster.
How to know if you're in the harder Module 2, and how to pace differently when the questions get dense at the end.
SAT Math rewards pattern recognition more than raw math ability. You don't need to be fluent in every topic — you need to recognize which of ~40 question archetypes you're looking at and apply the right attack. Nova has drilled those archetypes thousands of times, so when you describe a problem to her, she can tell you within seconds which strategy applies: plug in, backsolve, use Desmos, or solve algebraically. That pattern library is what separates a 650 student from an 800 student.
Unlimited. Nova generates fresh questions calibrated to your level and can pull from every question type the College Board has released. You never run out.
Yes — she'll walk you through the exact Desmos moves (graphing, regression, variable sliders) that save time on the digital SAT, which most paper-SAT prep books don't cover.
Realistically, yes, if you put in 3–4 hours a week for 8–10 weeks. That trajectory is typical for students who use Nova daily as a study partner rather than once-a-week.
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