ACT Study Plan

<p>Does anyone here know how to study for the ACT?
I'm going to take the ACT on september 15th. With a little over a month left to study, what is the best way to study.
For past ACT's i read the Princeton Review book so i kno all the material. But i still ended up witha 25.</p>

<p>All i want to do is practice questions and go over the answers. The only thing is that i dont want to spend all day studying.</p>

<p>Can anyone give me a good study plan to take questions and review the answers within about 2 - 1/2 hours a day..6 days a week?</p>

<p>I plan on raising my score from a 25 to the 27-29 range. What can i do to achieve that??</p>

<p>buy every single act practice book you can afford and just do problems.tis the only way.</p>

<p>you're kinda late in starting but here is what I've been doing.</p>

<p>I have a 35 and am paranoid about scoring 36, so this has been my program (started July 1st)</p>

<p>1st day-Eng+Math
2nd day-Science-reading
rotate</p>

<p>simple plan. I found it to be the best way as long as you are motivated.</p>

<p>BUY 10 MCGRAW HILL TESTS (you should get done with that by the time school starts)</p>

<p>BUY barrons 2007 and do those 4 on the weekends leading up sept 15.</p>

<p>It's funny that people claim you should just buy every book. Don't waste your time on that. I tried books in 10th grade before signing up for an online course in 11th grade and a lot of the books have errors.</p>

<p>If you have the money to do a course that is online and lets you use it when you want to, I would do so. </p>

<p>Practice only helps you perfect your test taking. Lots of practice can be good if you're (a) slow or (b) making lots of silly mistakes. If you aren't already at a 34 (which would indicate you could possibly know everything tested), then you need to learn the things that are on the test!</p>