36 Math ACT

<p>Is having a 36 math act score a big accomplishment?</p>

<p>no, 36 math sucks</p>

<p>so what's better</p>

<p>rickpaul i am over your STUPID threads. are u trying to show off here?????????</p>

<p>how many people a year get a 36 ACT...like is it super rare?...i thought SAT was rarer</p>

<p>math that is...how many people get a 36 act math</p>

<p>Less people get 36 composite on ACT per year (because it's a little harder and there are FOUR sections)</p>

<p>1863 people got a 36 math in class of 2004.</p>

<p>the math section seems to be the most typical 36 scoring section...... ive rarely seen a 36 on a section like science, on the other hand.</p>

<p>all the 36 maths are because of those asians...</p>

<p>wheres a link to the data of 1863 people getting ACT math 36</p>

<p>Is a 36 a bigger, smaller, or similar accomplishment to an 800 on Math SAT I???</p>

<p>ACT math questions are easier in my opinion, but there are more of them, so you decide</p>

<p>I find Act math questions to be much more difficult. They test concepts through pre-algebra. Also, you have to perform at a much faster pace.</p>

<p>"Pre-algebra"- is that multiplication and long division? ;)</p>

<p>haha i meant pre-calculus. I'm retarded.</p>

<p>I think 36 math act is easier than 800 math sat.. but thats only because i got a 36/720.</p>

<p>The act tests math "knowledge" while the sat tests math "reasoning" The scores aren't comparable.</p>

<p>^ true, perhaps, but I still think ACT's 36 (math) > SAT 800</p>

<p>i personally think it was easier for me to get my 36 math ACT than my 800 sat I math </p>

<p>it MIGHT have been that i was more stressed during the SATs while I was relatively calm during the first half of the ACT...</p>

<p>9917 got an 800 math, 1863 got a 36 math, so ACT 36 is indeed > than SAT 800 regarding exclusivity. </p>

<p>as for the relative difficulty of the act sections, from easiest to hardest in terms of people scoring a 36 (as well as in terms of average score) is:
Reading (9933 with a 36)
Science (2875)
Math (1863)
English (1085)</p>

<p>the link for the 1863 (and the other act stuff) is <a href="http://www.act.org/news/data/04/pdf/t4.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.act.org/news/data/04/pdf/t4.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>