Ahhhhhhhhhhh ACT after-tomorrow!!

<p>any last minute tips?!? extra things to study? final words of advice??????</p>

<p>what practice tests did you take?
did you take PR 1296 science? because they are pretty hard…anyways good luck man
im also taking it day after tomorrow no pressure</p>

<p>calm down, look at it this way: in 3 days, everthing is over :wink:
I did pr1296, mcGraw 10 practice tests and most of the Barrons 36.
Seriously the only important thing is to be calm and to keep distance to the test. From there its easy.</p>

<p>@Metroka did you find PR 1296 science harder than the red book?
also, barrons 36 doesnt really have that much practice…i dont think it was that much of a benefit for me</p>

<p>You have an advantage on the ACT if you’re good at math and science. Math takes up 60 minutes. I’ve seen people who are good at math finish math section in 40 minutes and start working on the reading section for the remaining 20 minutes. This could save up a LOT of time actually.</p>

<p>so once your done with a section, you can skip ahead? is that what youre saying timmyocho?</p>

<p>from what ive seen yes but I wouldnt take chances like that plus im no math genius</p>

<p>@ cristopher…</p>

<p>you CAN NOT skip ahead sections. They tell you 203948203984 times before and during the test, and most proctors are total sticklers about it. It cheating anyways</p>

<p>i counted. it was 203948203985 times for me.</p>

<p>Don’t cheat and don’t encourage others to cheat,timmycho. The only people who skip ahead and and risk getting caught and their scores canceled are idiots.</p>

<p>ya i thought so…</p>

<p>I expect the writing to be super easy. Question tho, did you guys include an argument and prove it wrong in your essay? I figure this is what most people would do along with the body supports.</p>

<p>honestly, i finished reading in 20 minutes and got a 36. there is no need for you to skip ahead anyway. you’ll have plenty of time.</p>

<p>^^and I’ve consistently gotten tens, so I don’t know if you should take my advice, but yes, they do expect counterarguments—why I could never got an eleven or twelve.</p>