<p>Im getting the same scores as I am in Math 36... happy abt that</p>
<p>in english: i got a frikking 23... i dunno wht to do.. </p>
<p>please help me wht to do</p>
<p>Im getting the same scores as I am in Math 36... happy abt that</p>
<p>in english: i got a frikking 23... i dunno wht to do.. </p>
<p>please help me wht to do</p>
<p>I heard from an ACT expert that Barron's is not a good guide book because it tests only 50% on what is on the actual test. McGraw Hill and the Real ACT guide book is the best way to go.</p>
<p>really? cuz damn.. it covers a lot of ****.. and i havent see this much in like PR or other books. I mean the questions seem very difficult and I want questions like that so that I can get used to hard questions..</p>
<p>but, my problem is those rhetorical skills questions.. how do people improve from that. Im just using the barron's and its quite good.. but its still hard... for grammer.. i was using elements of style.. best book ever.. </p>
<p>someone help me with rhetorical skills questions....</p>
<p>thx</p>
<p>usually you can eliminate a lot of the rhetorical question answers from common sense. after you're down to two or three, read a little bit of the passage to pick the right answer.</p>
<p>lol ive had the same thing i just started using the barrons book today, and am doing horrible. I find that alot of the math they use is not what is used on the real act and some of their problems seem too much like sat problems.</p>
<p>yea, barron's tests difficult material, but it isn't realistic. why don't you just get the REAL ACT book. It has 3 previously used tests, so you can't really go wrong there.</p>