<p>Anyone know of any methods, like the Xiggi Method, but for the ACT?</p>
<p>I just did practice problems. basically that was it</p>
<p>Get the red book - basically the BB of the ACT</p>
<p>It only has 3 tests…</p>
<p>1296 Questions from the PR. Practice makes perfect.</p>
<p>3 ACTUAL TESTS tho</p>
<p>I agree with mabs; get the red book, take the practice tests, review thoroughly what you missed. I would use princeton review as a refresher for grammar and math.</p>
<p>Why is it that for the SAT there’s BB 1, BB 2, 10 RS, 8 RS, and PSATs… adding up to almost over 25 sources of resource, where there’s only THREE for the ACT.</p>
<p>I find the ACT to be harder, so why don’t they have more editions?</p>
<p>there are a few more tests out there.</p>
<p>the one you can get from your counselor.</p>
<p>one on the ACT site, i think.</p>
<p>and there are a couple you can find through google searches.</p>
<p>yeah, it would be nice if there were more … but i guess you just gotta work with whatcha got available.</p>
<p>I recommend the PR1296. It has 1296 practice questions, so for sure you will learn a lot of things by the time you finish the book. I didn’t finish the whole book, but skipped from section to section, and felt that it helped. Wish I would’ve studied more, though.</p>
<p>If you are solely dependent on ACT, you probably shouldn’t do this, but what I did was
Acquired Red Book.
Looked at,did some problems like a week before.
Took one full practice test day before just to get down timing (very important!)
I pretty much took ACT to see what I can get</p>