<p>Marcut, I sent something similar.</p>
<p>@marcut</p>
<p>How did you manage to get hundreds of hours out of the red book? I’m not trying to criticize, I’m legitimately wondering because I felt it was pretty much useless after going through the 3 tests.</p>
<p>@ Iris. I think it was all 3 of them because the syringe was already at 50 and the 3 all caused at least 50 in increase.</p>
<p>@Iris… i remember only one of them was supposed to be the answer… dont remember…</p>
<p>Can someone post a link to the ACT email? </p>
<p>The more that complain the higher likelihood of a curve more suitable for all the angry students</p>
<p>@vgfanatic, I was implying the hours weren’t only in the red book, but I did take all 5 tests and read the strategies</p>
<p>@rxllrn… wait… were we not talking bout the question that was like “which one of these has higher score than water?”… so i thought… you were supposed to compare it to H2O D value… idk…anymore</p>
<p>I did okay on some of the earlier passages. But I really had to go to the bathroom. I had 8 minutes for the last passage and guessed on every question, I couldn’t focus even after re-reading multiple times what was happening in the last passage.</p>
<p>If the world of students tanks, do they curve it by a lot or just still stick to 40 is a 36, 39 is a 34/35 deal? Because then I’m going to hit in the low-mid 20s</p>
<p>There is a probable chance that I will be sending an e-mail. I got a 35 in April and I’m praying for a 27.</p>
<p>Hopefully the curve goes like this
36-perfect score
35- 4 questions wrong
34- 8 questions wrong
33-12
32-16
31- 20 wrong (I think I got this one)</p>
<p>I feel like the normal curve is that if a certain amount of percent gets a question wrong, then its curved accordingly. So if 99% got question 40 wrong, then a 39 can be a 36</p>
<p>[Send</a> a Question by Email | ACT Student](<a href=“http://www.actstudent.org/forms/]Send”>http://www.actstudent.org/forms/)</p>
<p>“After you’ve taken the test, if you . . .
Have a question about your ACT scores”</p>
<p>To send an email. Please don’t flame them though.</p>
<p>Uhh. The curve is not going to be 50% wrong = 31.</p>
<p>It’d be more like 3-4 wrong is a 31, if we’re lucky.</p>
<p>The science curve is usually 1 wrong = 34, 2 wrong = 32, etc, before the rate of change decreases.</p>
<p>With regards to all syringe problems, its was important to keep in mind the fundamental relationship (for everything except water as a solid) that with an increase in temperature, comes an increase in volume, and consequently for a gas in a closed container, an increase in pressure, which in turn (finally) means a decrease in density, because the mass in the syringe would stay constant despite an increase in the volume of the syringe.</p>
<p>What was the length for the guitar?</p>
<p>From Low-E to D compared with from Low-E to F sharp.</p>
<p>Well it wont be 99, it was multiple choice so somewhere like 20-30 percent correct</p>
<p>I think I said 2. but I can’t remember if it was lower or higher.</p>
<p>I felt like the question with the guitar did not give enough information. It was like they expected us all to be musicians.</p>
<p>ACT Curve info</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/act-preparation/826983-sorry-act-has-no-curve-based-test-result.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/act-preparation/826983-sorry-act-has-no-curve-based-test-result.html</a></p>
<p>My D thought all but the last passage were fairly easy. She mostly guessed on the last passage questions.</p>
<p>I just e-mailed them to express many students in my area, including myself felt the science section was significantly harder than previous science sections on ACTs or harder than the red prep book released by the ACT</p>