<p>Besides the "Real ACT" book, what other books do you suggest, and why? PR, Barrons, McGraw, etc?</p>
<p>PR cracking the ACT and PR 1296 questions. I went from a 26 composite to hopefully over a 30 on this test. These books are increadibly accurate and helped me insanly. If your in the 30+ range I would buy barrons books as they are the hardest and would give the most challenge</p>
<p>Yaa, outside of the red book and Princeton review everything is a little lacking. If you do go with Barrons, just take some of the hard questions with a grain of salt cause they are not going to be on the test and are not worth getting mad about.
I also recommended the act black book before, which is popular at the tutoring place I work. Some people disagreed with me, but i think its helpful if you are below 27 or so or are looking for a quicker overview. – see a lot of that at the place I work, but not so much at CC.</p>
<p>If you get through the Red Book and a Princeton book, correct your tests, and learn from your mistakes, you should be all set.</p>
<p>I also recommend the Princeton Review book.</p>
<p>Anyone tried the McGraw?</p>
<p>No, I think their books are typically recommended for AP exam preparation.</p>
<p>Oh, ok. Thanks for your inputs guys! :)</p>
<p>I loved Barron’s. I reviewed over the science portion and went from a 21 to a 28 to make a 30 composite. Friend used it and got a 32. It’s more difficult than the actual test. Rented it from the library…highly recommended :D</p>