<p>I'd like to achieve a composite of 32 during the September testing date, and received a score of 30 in June.</p>
<p>Score break down:</p>
<p>English: 32
Math: 26
Reading: 31
Science: 31</p>
<p>Combined writing/reading: 30
Essay: 9</p>
<p>I ran out of time in math and science, and rushed my last reading passage.. I can probably pull up my math somehow, but I'm wondering what I should focus on for the 32.</p>
<p>Low math scores are thematic for me; My math was lowest on the SAT, and I don't enjoy it.</p>
<p>Yeah, if you pull your science and reading scores up a point or two, and bring your math score up to a 29-30+, you should easily get a 32.</p>
<p>We at CC can help you with math questions. I’m basically the opposite of you; I scored a perfect 36 on math ACT and all my other scores were around 30-31.</p>
<p>what did you do to get ur perfect score in math? which books did you use?</p>
<p>I had previously done a lot of math competitions (AMC, AIME, USAMO, others) and didn’t feel the need to prepare for ACT.</p>
<p>That’s what I was thinking.</p>
<p>This is my goal:</p>
<p>English: 32
Math: 29
Reading: 32
Science: 33</p>
<p>Which will put me right at 32… My writing could pull me down to the 31, but most scholarship programs and colleges create your composite without it. With the right timing, I could probably pull more points in science as well, just depends on the test date.</p>
<p>I planned on going over ~20 problems a day and studying the math concepts involved up until test day to prepare, I’m not sure what else to do.</p>
<p>Ah okay. I don’t think your essay counts toward your composite score. When I took the ACT I scored a 32:</p>
<p>English: 30
Math: 36
Reading: 31
Science: 30</p>
<p>Mostly, just review concepts that you’re struggling with or have forgotten (particularly for math, writing). The rest is basic test-taking strategy.</p>
<p>If I could pull a 34-36 science score, that would really help me out… That math score is just really sad though.</p>