ACT for Busy Students: 15 Simple Steps to Tackle the ACT
eBook - ePub

ACT for Busy Students: 15 Simple Steps to Tackle the ACT

15 Simple Steps to Tackle the ACT

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  1. 384 páginas
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eBook - ePub

ACT for Busy Students: 15 Simple Steps to Tackle the ACT

15 Simple Steps to Tackle the ACT

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Kaplan's ACT for Busy Students provides streamlined prep to help you score higher even if you're short on study time. Targeted review, essential practice, and expert advice aid you in mastering the most important skills, so you can face the test with confidence. Kaplan Test Prep is the Official Partner for Live Online Prep for the ACT. For more information visit kaptest.com/onlinepreplive. Kaplan is so certain that ACT for Busy Students offers the guidance you need that we guarantee it: After studying with our book, you'll score higher on the ACT—or your money back. Essential Review

  • Review the most important skills and concepts for all sections of the ACT
  • 1 full-length practice test with complete answer explanations
  • Customized, step-by-step study schedules based on how much time you have until the test
  • More than 250 practice questions
  • Strategies and tips for the optional Writing test

Expert Guidance

  • Kaplan's expert teachers make sure our tests are true to the ACT
  • 9 out of 10 Kaplan students get into one or more of their top choice colleges

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Información

Año
2020
ISBN
9781506272245
Categoría
Study Aids
Part 1
Preparing for the ACT
Step One
Introduction to the ACT
STEP 1 PREVIEW
Introduction
The Test Format
The Test Strategies
The Concepts Tested
What Is the ACT?
What Is the ACT Writing Test?
How Is the ACT Scored?
How Many ACT Scores Will You Get?
How Do Colleges Use Your ACT Scores?
Should You Guess on the ACT?
Can You Retake the Test?
INTRODUCTION
You’ve probably heard rumors to the effect that the ACT is a tough exam. Well, the rumors are true. Nevertheless, just because this is a challenging test, does not mean you can’t earn a great score. If you follow the steps in this book, you’ll have done more preparation for the ACT than most other people sitting with you on test day. You’ll learn three things that will enable you to take control of the ACT: the test format, test strategies, and the concepts tested.
The Test Format
The ACT is very predictable. You’d think the test makers would get bored after a while, but they don’t. The same kinds of questions, testing the same skills and concepts, appear every time the ACT is given.
Because the test specifications rarely change, you should know in advance what to expect on every subject test. Just a little familiarity with the directions and common question types can make an enormous difference.
The Test Strategies
The ACT isn’t a normal exam. Normal exams test mostly your memory. But the ACT tests problem-solving skills as well as memory, and it does so in a standardized test format. That makes the test highly vulnerable to test-smart strategies and techniques.
Most students miss a lot of ACT questions for no good reason. They see a tough-looking question, say to themselves, “Uh-oh, I don’t remember how to do that,” and start to gnaw on their No. 2 pencils.
But many ACT questions can be answered without complete knowledge of the material being tested. Often, all you need to do to succeed is to think strategically and creatively.
The Concepts Tested
The ACT is designed to test skills and concepts learned in high school and needed for college. Familiarity with the test, coupled with smart test-taking strategies, will take you only so far. For your best score, you need to sharpen the skills and knowledge that the ACT rewards.
The good news is that most ACT content is pretty basic. You’ve probably already learned in high school most of what the ACT expects you to know. But you may need help remembering.
In short, follow these three principles:
Learn the test format.
Learn test strategies.
Learn the concepts tested.
If you do, you’ll find yourself in full command of your ACT test-taking experience.
WHAT IS THE ACT?
Okay, let’s start with the basics. The ACT is a three-hour exam (two hours and 55 minutes, to be precise) taken by high school juniors and seniors for admission to college. It’s a test of problem-solving skills—which means that you can improve your performance by preparing for it.
All students who take the ACT complete four subject tests: English, Math, Reading, and Science. All four subject tests are designed primarily to test skills rather than knowledge, though some knowledge is required—particularly in English, for which knowledge of grammar and writing mechanics is important, and in Math, for which you need to know the basic math concepts taught in a regular high school curriculum.
The ACT:
Is about three hours long
Includes a short break (between the second and third subtests)
Consists of a total of 215 scored questions
Has four subject tests:
—English (45 minutes, 75 questions)
—Math (60 minutes, 60 questions)
—Reading (35 minutes, 40 questions)
—Science (35 minutes, 40 questions)
Includes an optional Writing test:
—Writing (40 minutes, 1 essay question)
WHAT IS THE ACT WRITING TEST?
The ACT Writing test is a 40-minute, optional section of the ACT that measures your writing skills. Colleges and universities have the option to make the Writing test a requirement for admission or to use the results to determine course placement. Students who are applying to college can decide whether to take the Writing test based on the requirements of the schools to which they plan to apply. For this optional test, students write an essay in response to a prompt that asks them to take a stand on an issue. The ACT Assessment plus Writing takes approximately three hours and 40 minutes to complete. You must decide when you sign up to take the ACT whether or not you will be taking the Writing portion. The registration fee for the ACT plus Writing is $56.50; the fee for the basic ACT without the Writing test is $39.50. A list of the schools that require or recommend scores from the ACT Writing test are available at: https://actapps.act.org/writPrefRM.
Should You Take the Writing Test?
Find out the requirements of the schools to which you’re applying so you can determine whether to complete the essay on test day.
HOW IS THE ACT SCORED?
Your ACT score is not merely the sum total of questions you get right. That would be too simple. Instead, the test makers add up all of your correct answers to get what they call a “raw” score. Then they put that raw score into a very large computer, which proceeds to shake, rattle, smoke, and wheeze before spitting out an official score at the other end. That score—which has been put through what they call a scoring formula—is your “scaled” score.
ACT scaled scor...

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