<p>My ACT score in math is an 18. It's my lowest score,<br>
English-24
Reading-30
Science-19
I've been using a regular scientific calculator but I was surfing the web the other day and found <a href="http://www.calculatorsoft.com%5B/url%5D">www.calculatorsoft.com</a>. They sell programs that download onto your calculator and solve the problems for you. They are permitted for use on the ACT and SAT. Do you think if I use this I could get a 30 on the math section?</p>
<p>a program wont help u, u must blow at math</p>
<p>Id recommend going over basic trig and algebra, take practice math sections, see what you missed and what you missed it, understand how to resolve the problem. The ACT math is fairly easy if you dont make silly mistakes.</p>
<p>Okay but if I used this program could i get a 30? Go to <a href="http://www.calculatorsoft.com%5B/url%5D">www.calculatorsoft.com</a>.</p>
<p>No software will "solve the problems for you". Even this site says their software can help you "combined with your own logic and reasoning". It is just a bunch of formulas that you can plug numbers into. If you can't remember formulas, you can download them for free for your graphing calculator or store them yourself. It's probably easier to do that and then plug the numbers in by hand. Most of the questions would take you longer to do with the software, because you would have to reconstruct them for input into the program.</p>
<p>You'd be better off taking Patrick's advice.</p>
<p>I do think a graphing calculator can be very helpful, but perhaps only if you have a chance to get used to it before the test (by using it in math class, for example).</p>
<p>dude are you seriously going to buy that crap, you must be kidding me, that guy who said that he bought one and scored a 1530 looks like he's atleast 25.
and i'm sure that if you pick up the princeton review and or the real act prep guide do some practice, check over the answers and then just go online and look for a basic review of geometry/alg/trig that you'll score atleast a 25</p>