<p>How good is this book, really? Is it an accurate representation of the actual test?</p>
<p>It’s easier than the actual thing. I would only recommend taking official retired tests made by ACT. You need to get in the mind of the test makers, and that is the only way to do it.</p>
<p>I already have the Red Book and looked at the practice test on the site, are there any more released by ACT?</p>
<p>Many people on CC as well as other websites do not like it because they believe it is too easy! I will not use it</p>
<p>I find this book generally pretty easy compared to the normal thing… However, I scored a 35 on my ACT English. I’m gonna retake the ACT again, and I’ve been using this book… and I’m getting WAY lower on the English. I’ve gotten a 32 and 30 on English in this book for some reason. I mean most of it is dumb mistakes by me, but still… some of those rhetorical questions are hard.</p>
<p>Anyone agree/disagree?</p>
<p>I used it and it was accurate for me. I read a thread awhile back with users on here whining and whining about how ridiculously easy McGraw Hill’s was. I got a 31 on the real ACT (not the big red book–the actual ACT test), and my practice tests in McGraw Hill’s were similar, if not lower, than that, on average. I found that on the actual ACT the math was very, very similar to McGraw Hill’s with the exception of maybe the last 10 questions… So I would use McGraw Hill maybe in conjunction with the Red Book or the Princeton one. It perhaps is a bit easier as a whole, but don’t freak out like a lot of users on here.</p>
<p>AznPride–I agree. I got a 33 on the actual ACT… I remember some of the English questions being pretty “dumb” easy misses.</p>