<p>Hi everyone,</p>
<p>I notice that there are much fewer ACT resources than SAT resources. Is there a way I can look at old ACT exams, like the QAS for the SAT? Also, which prep book has the most realistic ACT practice tests? Thanks!</p>
<p>Hi everyone,</p>
<p>I notice that there are much fewer ACT resources than SAT resources. Is there a way I can look at old ACT exams, like the QAS for the SAT? Also, which prep book has the most realistic ACT practice tests? Thanks!</p>
<p>The Red Book (The REAL Act Prep Guide by the ACT) has 5 full length actual tests (the most recent edition, the 3rd).</p>
<p>Princeton Review’s 1,296 ACT Questions is just under that in practice (as you can tell, there is a lot of tests in there), then their Cracking the ACT book, and Barron’s 36 ACT.</p>
<p>If you’re practicing for the September one, GREAT IDEA! If you practice a little bit every day until then, you’ll be almost guaranteed a high, high score.</p>
<p>The red book is all I used. It not only gives the answers but it explains all of them in detail.</p>
<p>can anyone recommend other books to use besides the Red Book? books that accurately represent the difficulty of the test?</p>
<p>The Red Book is a product of ACT, inc. It really does seem to be the most accurate with regards to question format and question type (for obvious reasons). I really can’t comprehend how people expressly “study,” per se, for the ACT. Take practice tests. That really is the best way to go.</p>