<p>Does the act flag u for drastic score increases like the sat? I slept during the science section because I suk at science and forgot that the act even tested u on it but if i study some science and go from 0 to 29 is it all good</p>
<p>Well wouldn’t C be juxtaposed with discussion about her time at uchicago which wouldn’t make as much sense?</p>
<p>Oh no it’s definitely D. C wouldn’t make sense. B was in the paragraph that ends in UChicago. C was right after the UChicago sentence… Sorry!</p>
<p>I thought the english was stupidly easy.
Math was too, I just made stupid mistakes
Reading went quite well…</p>
<p>Science was hell.</p>
<p>Wow mlolo that sounds pretty identical to my experience</p>
<p>English: 36 as of now
Math: 35 as of now
Reading: 36, almost positive
Science: who even knows. Hopefully 32 or above for 35 composite.</p>
<p>I think I got 1 wrong FOR SURE on the math. I may have gotten another 1 or 2 due to stupid mistakes (I circle answers, then bubble, and may have made mistakes in there; I didn’t have time to check). I got 1 wrong on reading from what I know. lol Science, anything 30+ will be good. I don’t care about composite. I wanted to get up my reading subscore (32) and science subscore (31) from last time for the schools that superscore the ACT. So, I don’t really care about math and english since I got 36s last time. still, really scared</p>
<p>The background answer was best placed in the last possible spot.
Half-life question, anyone?</p>
<p>It was to provide a definition</p>
<p>The answer for the half life question was the choice with the parentheses, to explain what “carbon-14’s half-life” meant.</p>
<p>This was the only one I was iffy on for the reading – the “cold hard facts” one. I had it between reliable and evidence that points to one thing, I think I picked that points to one thing since the scientist said they have plenty of evidence coming in, but it doesn’t add up.</p>
<p>Yay, I got that one right. I wasn’t sure, I spent a long time thinking about whether the parentheses would be redundant.</p>
<p>@eburke73 You know, you might be right on that. I put the answer about it being accurate and reliable.</p>
<p>99% sure it’s accurate and reliable.</p>
<p>can someone send me the google doc? I am not able to open it here.</p>
<p>I had that at first but I changed it, l was very unsure. I just looked at the scientist thing as evidence. Idk.</p>
<p>for the point translation did you guys get 6,-7?</p>
<p>Also, a bit random, but paired with a 3.65 uw gpa, will a 30-31 act score make me competitive at schools like Boston College and Trinity? I have tons of sports, ec’s, and leadership </p>
<p>I think the idea is that they want to know if you’re familiar with the idiom. Cold hard facts as a phrase is almost always used in the context of describing data or statistics that are yield accurate, reliable figures. Such data would come in handy to scientists who simply don’t have any conclusive facts.</p>
<p>I’m not sure of this, can anyone confirm? According to the ACT Website, it says, “After you test, you can check to see if your scores are available online. Multiple-choice scores from this test date will be first posted online beginning April 21 through June 6, 2014.” April 21 would be just 9 days after the test…isn’t that early? I’ve taken an ACT before, and I do not remember it saying something like that </p>
<p>@ckoepp127 yeah, what you’re saying makes total sense, that’s what I’ve been thinking today. I probably just overthought it, haha. Oh well, that’s one of the only ones I was unsure of across the whole test.</p>