Official June 10th ACT Discussion

<p>How/where can you see your scores? I've never taken this test before so I'm totally clueless on when you find out, other than they said 4-7 weeks for mail notification I think.</p>

<p>In english,
what did u guys put for the one question about prairie and woods thing.
it was like "i was curious and intrieged... by a small car..., ________
what did u guys put for the ______
the choices were
A. No change (wheter if...
B. if...
C. coming to a stop
D. that ...</p>

<p>I thought the Kinetic energy/block question was for case 1...with the horizontal movment. Either way, wouldn't KE go up compared to the KE of the block when it was at a standstill?</p>

<p>Oz-it's "c"</p>

<p>i said from the motor to the stirring rod to the ice cream</p>

<p>i am paying for my scores, no question</p>

<p>
[quote]
Did anyone else think that firewood question in the math section was a typo? The number of hickory firewood (25 bundles) was a given, yet it asked you to find # of HF, and 25 wasn't a choice. I don't think i misread this.

[/quote]

The 25 was the total number of bundles, which cost $66
I said 17, which I'm pretty sure is right</p>

<p>Indeed Martha :)</p>

<p>Miss Ind: Viewing</a> Scores Early</p>

<p>I said the heat moves through the steel container to the salt and stuff, because that is what causes the ice cream to freeze anyways. It looses a lot of its heat energy.</p>

<p>Question:</p>

<p>When I first got the test booklet I noticed that the booklet was copyright in 2003. Does this mean this was a previously given test?</p>

<p>excel, unless you test in October in Ohio at a test center where they're equating new test forms, all tests are previously given.</p>

<p>so that was an exact copy of an old test?</p>

<p>

If that's the case then the answer is definitely that KE goes down because FRICTION CAUSES KINETIC ENERGY(THE ENERGY OF MOTION) BECAUSE IT IMPEDES MOVEMENT.:)</p>

<p>Does any one remember the last letter choice for the science section? I didn't have enough time to read it and i just marked b(g)</p>

<p>Do you remember what the question was?</p>

<p>it was one of the physics questions</p>

<p>It's really weird how ACT works in Canada. (Actually, I'm not even sure how it works in the States)</p>

<p>I've taken the ACT twice (once in April, and one yesterday), and for both tests, I used booklets with broken seals. At both locations, the proctors told us not to worry about them because ACT doesn't send them new booklets, so they just re-use the old ones. (As a result, we couldn't write anything in the booklet, including underlining...ergh)</p>

<p>Are ACT exams standardized in the States? (by "standardized" I mean everyone across the country gets the SAME copy of the exam)</p>

<p>And I'm sure that I did a different version of ACT yesterday from most posters on this forum -- because I had different questions. (And yes, I'm aware there are about 40 versions of ACT exams)</p>

<p>Yeah, here they're standardized--so did y'all get scratch paper instead?</p>

<p>Yeah...we get scratch paper</p>

<p>lubini,
The exam is standardized everywhere, and that has nothing to do with what version of the test you get.</p>

<p>All the foreign test centers use the same test form, which is different from the US one.</p>

<p>For testing outside the US, the test centers reuse the same test books because there's no way they could ship the right number right before each test, not only because they might not arrive on time but because testers don't preregister and they have no idea how many testers to expect (though I'm not sure this applies to Canada).</p>