<p>All the questions I miss are detail-based....the questions without line references. I'm unable to find/refer back to the passage to exactly where the answer is stated. Any advice?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>All the questions I miss are detail-based....the questions without line references. I'm unable to find/refer back to the passage to exactly where the answer is stated. Any advice?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>I used to be in your shoes a little while back.. i used to consistently miss 12-15 questions each time on reading.. but i learned a pretty good strategy and now I miss only 2-3 questions each time on reading</p>
<p>here it is:</p>
<p>read the passages as fast as i can and NOT try to comprehend everything.. if i missed one or two sentences, i'd just blitz over them b/c chances are they aren't needed... also.. by just reading it and NOT TRYING to comprehend it, you remember a lot more than you think... on the first three tests, i tried to comprehend it... average score was a 23 (25, 21, 23) on reading.... on the last 2, i didn't try to comprehend it, and my average jumped 10 whole points to a 33 on reading (32 and 34)... that's the strategy for me that works on both science and reading... on science, i read even faster and really skim it because the questions usually refer you to where you need to go if you look carefully... but on reading i take a little more time to read it without going over the time limit</p>
<p>remember, it's not reading fast without understanding -- it's reading fast without TRYING to understand. If you sit there and constantly think about what you're reading, you'll slow down and you can get confused. If you just read it without thinking about what your reading, you'll retain a lot more information than when you think. It's a weird concept, and it took me a while to grasp. But, when you eventually get it down, it really pumps your reading score up (from 25, 21, and 23 up to a 32 and 34 for me). When did this, I was able to answer 4 of the 10 questions of each passage without even going back to the passage (all in my memory). I then answered 2 to 3 by looking at the passage to make sure I had the right choice (i thought I knew the answer, but I wasn't totally sure). And, I answered the remaining 3 to 4 questions by searching the passage b/c i didn't know the answers. Because I did this, my timing got a lot better (I still had moments where I got behind on time, but some passages just naturally take longer than others for me). But I always finished under this method, whether it was at home or those 2 times i took the test and got a composite of 34 with the 32 in reading and a composite of 35 with the 34 in reading</p>
<p>that helped me.. there are many other strategies out there, but your problem and the problem i had with reading a little while back are pretty identical.. so try this out for a while and see if it works (it takes a little time, practice, and patience, but it'll work out)... took me a few months, but i eventually got the hang of it</p>
<p>Thanks so much, I didn't ask the question but I am struggling with the ACT reading as well.</p>
<p>Thanks a lot for the advice. I will definitely try it out.</p>
<p>wow im gonna try that out</p>