ACT science facts we need to know

<p>I am doing act practice and getting a 35-36 on most of them but every once in a while i find questions asking not about the experiment or graph but rather about previous learned material not found on the test. Such as" blahblah light breaks water into gas in the form of:" This one is particularly easy but I was just wondering if anyone has summarized all the "facts" we needed to know before taking the act test if so can anyone link me to that page? if not, is it because the information is too broad and shallow and theres no use trying to learn it?</p>

<p>@Jaybee2016 Expect 4 questions that require actual science knowledge. </p>

<p>There is no master list that I am aware of that summarizes what ACT will ask.</p>

<p>The test is about scientific reasoning, so even if you don’t remember a few content details, you’ll still probably be able to figure out the answers to many of the questions in these fields:</p>

<p>Biology: biology, botany, zoology, microbiology, ecology, genetics, and evolution</p>

<p>Chemistry: atomic theory, inorganic chemical reactions, chemical bonding, reaction rates, solutions, equilibriums, gas laws, electrochemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, and properties and states of matter</p>

<p>Physics: mechanics, energy, thermodynamics, electromagnetism, fluids, solids, and light waves</p>

<p>Earth Sciences: geology, meteorology, oceanography, astronomy, and environmental sciences</p>