How Can I Improve My ACT Score in Six Weeks?

<p>I'm a senior and I have been working by behind off trying to get a good score on the ACT. I will be taking the ACT again on June 14 and I need to improve my score in order to get a scholarship to the school of my choice. I worked out a deal with the college admissions and they would give me partial scholarship if I can raise my ACT score by 3-5 points. I have the Real ACT official test book along with Barron, Princeton, and Kaplan. My GPA is a 3.75 and I have over two hundred hours worth of volunteer work. I also took the SAT in March 2014 (score of 1400: CR 520, M 410, W 470 with essay score of 9) and I just took the SAT again on May 3rd. Any suggestion would be most helpful.</p>

<p>Here are my ACT scores:</p>

<p>Feb 2014 (with writing)
Composite: 19
English: 20 (writing scored a 10)
Math: 15
Reading:21
Science: 21</p>

<p>April 2014 (no writing)
Composite: 20
English: 22
Math: 16
Reading: 22
Science: 21</p>

<p>I know all the basic tips (like do every question, guess, do the easiest questions first, and skip around) and I study every single day (even the weekends) for three hours. I stopped studying for the ACT when I have to study for the SAT. I had just learned how to fast read and skim when I was studying for the SAT (so I have increased my reading skills.). I have a really hard time in math and I even have tutors to help. I can easily learn 30 vocabulary words in a day, but I can't understand any algebraic formulas that I have been trying to learn for five years. Please give me helpful tips, so I can go to the college of my choice. </p>

<p>Honestly, if you’ve been studying the ACT for three hours a day, you should be scoring upwards 25.
Get the Red Book, the act pdfs online, and barrons act 36.</p>

<p>Learn grammar rules and memorize them from barrons.
Study your math, there’s no shortcut, just do it.</p>

<p>practice.</p>

<p>That being said, here you go:</p>

<p>By far, the real tests are better. not only do they accurately represent the test questions but they come with test scoring curves so that they accurately represent your scores.</p>

<p>As for my methods of studying, here goes:</p>

<ol>
<li>Practice makes perfect.
Not a thing exists where practicing doesn’t help. Practice practice practice. I take 3 tests a week. Monday = Eng/Math. Tuesday = Read/sci. And so forth</li>
<li><p>Review mistakes
Always review your mistakes. On each test you must review in detail your mistakes. On the English and Math sections figure out what topic you missed and research it. In math, use the Khan Acedamy online. Just google it. In english refer back to you school books about those comma rules.</p></li>
<li><p>Analyze scores and questions missed for trends in your strengths and weaknesses. This step is difficult and time consuming. However, if you truly want to increase your scores, you MUST do this. There’s recently been studies showing just how much self analyzing can improve you.
For an example, I’ll use my scores. After I had taken 5 practice tests, both real and fake, I did the following:
a. Totaled all my missed questions
b. Added the numbers together per section.
c. Catorgorized missed questions.
I sorted using titles like these: For English: Passage Analysis, Sentance Sorting/adding, Comma Rules
For math: Sin/cos/tan, graphs, etc.
Reading: Passage analysis, details in passage, inference
Science: Details in passage, details in graph, science knowledge
I also added a “dumb mistakes” catagory to all sections
After doing this, I was able to view my weaknesses on a practical level. I found that of all missed english questions, 27% were passage analysis mistakes and 27% were dumb mistakes. These were the biggest percents.
For math, I found that at 46%, my biggest errors were dumb mistakes.
For reading, I found my biggests mistakes were again passage analysis
For science, it was dumb mistakes.</p></li>
</ol>

<p>Now that I knew my weaknesses, i could fix them. For dumb mistakes in English, I made myself slow down. For the passage analysis questions, I followed these guidelines: The sentance added must completely fit with the preceding sentance and the one after it. I was able to effectively fix my mistakes.
My previous scores had been: E=34, M=34, R=34, S=29. Total=32.75 =33
After studying my mistakes, I had: E=36, M=35, R=33, S=33 Total= 34.25 = 34
I was one question away from a 35! Very close! I had never gotten a 36E, 35M, or 33S before. My science was a 33 but I only missed two questions.</p>

<p>Now, once you hit a composite 30, it can be very difficult to improve your score. However, my method worked drastically! No matter what your score is right now, if you’re dedicated to improving, this WILL absolutely help!</p>

<p>Well, that was HOW I studied. But WHAT I studied also included techniques and guides. This is one of he best guides content wise. <a href=“Jeandevaches' Guide to the ACT - ACT Preparation - College Confidential Forums”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/act-preparation/1071765-jeandevaches-guide-to-the-act.html&lt;/a&gt;
I printed it all out, pinned it above my desk, and studied it before each test.
Use this guide to get a good score. Then analyze yourself to get a better score. Then use this guide again for perfection!</p>

<p>One last thing. Some of my personal tips per section:</p>

<p>English. If you have time read most of the content. It will help with questions about the passage as a whole. Most people don’t have trouble with time on this test. Follow the guide in the link above!</p>

<p>Math: You know it, or you don’t. If you do, don’t go to fast through the first 30-45. That is where most mistakes by students getting 30+ are made. If you don’t know the math, hit your math books! As I said use Khan Acedamy online and the guide above.</p>

<p>Reading: It’s vital you practice until you can read the ENTIRE passage in 3.5 to 4 minutes tops! Use the finger method to speed up your reading. Simply move your finger faster than your eyes. Remembering content is key on this section. You must practice immersing yourself into the story and making it exciting even when it’s not. Pace yourself. You need to be done with each section in 8:45. If your ahead of time always refer back to text for confirmation. Never answer only 5 questions and come back later. You’ll have forgotten so much that you’ll have to reread. This causes timeloss.Only skip ahead if you have NO IDEA what the answers are. And even then guess</p>

<p>Science: Read the short paragraph at the top then hit the questions. Don’t look at the content first. The science test is all about time. Read the questions and as you read them place your fingers accordingly. “Figure 1, bird x at site C produces how many eggs?” Place your fingers onto each part of the figure as you read the question. After this. follow the guide above.</p>

<p>One thing that works for every question is this: “Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.”</p>

<p>In conclusion, if you want to do well on the ACT, you have to commit to it. Slackers are lackers. If you truly want to do well and throw yourself into the prep, the you’ll succeed. Otherwise, no one can help you.</p>

<p>@made4him11027 Thank you so much! I am really glad that you left such a detail reply. For the record, I have been taking ACT and SAT back-to back (Feb ACT, March SAT, April ACT, May SAT, and June ACT), so I never had the chance to study for the same test longer than a month except for the May 3 (only had 3 weeks, since I just finished studying for the April ACT) and June 14 (which is six weeks). I just started studying for the ACT again on Monday (May 5), since I just finished the May SAT. </p>

<p>Overall: I never leave anything blank and I always use the process of elimination. I study for about three hours every day, even on weekends. I have multiple ACT guides as well as access to helpful Youtube videos. I want to do well and I try my hardest with every single test. I know I should have taken this test in my Junior year, but I thought I would get a better score if I wait until my Senior. My big mistake and now I am trying my hardest to get college readiness marks in all four areas.</p>

<p>English: I read all five passages and I never rush on English. I noticed that my biggest mistakes has to do with preposition, third person singular forms of pronouns, and past,present, and perfect past tense. For at least 8 questions, I do make dumb mistakes. I’m trying to improve my grammar as much as I can.</p>

<p>Math: I really have the hardest time in math (ever since third grade when I had to study for three hours each day for two months just to learn decimals). I spend hours upon hours reading about math, making posters and flash cards, and watching YouTube videos about math. I really have a hard time learning and retaining any math information. At lot of the time, I can only get 21 problems right. There may be four or five problems that I made dumb mistakes on. I only have time to answer 40 problems, so the rest are random guesses. For example, I had to spent two hours to learn the distant formula and slope of the line. When I took my practice test, I still got those problems wrong.
None of the problems look foreign to me , but I just can’t do them due to time and lack of knowledge.</p>

<p>Reading: I know that I am really too slow at reading and I need more time to answer the questions. Even if I read the passage for 4 minutes, underlined and wrote small notes near the passages, it still isn’t helping. I make the passage fun and excited, but I only have time to read three passages. I had used your recommended strategy for the first two ACT test and it’s not for me. A lot of people recommended that I should read the first and last sentence of each paragraph, instead of reading every single sentence. This strategy I used for the May SAT and will be using for my June ACT. I really want to get higher than a 22 and I have to be able to get to all four passages (and not get any information confused) to do so. </p>

<p>Science: I have a hard time breaking outside a 21. I always read the passage first, but I never have enough time to complete all 40 questions. The fighting science questions are the easiest for me, but the charts can be confusing. The details in the graph and lack of time that really messes me up.</p>

<p>I am trying my hardest and I am motivated to learn. All I can think about is these test and nothing else. I am trying my hardest to get better at this test and any suggestions are most helpful. The link along with your advice is really helpful.</p>