<p>yea, i've studied a lot for the past ACTs, and virtually have used every test prep book and real ACT practice tests there are....</p>
<p>...now what? i still need to study! lol...</p>
<p>yea, i've studied a lot for the past ACTs, and virtually have used every test prep book and real ACT practice tests there are....</p>
<p>...now what? i still need to study! lol...</p>
<p>I noticed you posted on a different thread that you got a 29 both times.
I received a 29 both times too. I took the June and the September one and I studied over the summer for it.</p>
<p>I used the 1296 ACT book and skimmed over the red book.
I’m sure you’ve tried Barron’s too?
If you really feel as if you’re out of books to study, retake the tests.
(Unless of course, you wrote all over then. When I take the practice tests,
I just write my answers on a separate piece of paper)
If you’re answering the same questions as you did, look over those… because you could just be missing those same ones on the ACT!</p>
<p>Good Luck.</p>
<p>If you have truly committed to test prep, rigorous review, timing, etc. you may have reached your ceiling…retest with less anxiety…29 is a decent score.</p>
<p>I never found books to help a lot… Take more rigorous classes in school to build mental endurance… and make sure you’re getting enough sleep before tests \ in a good mood. </p>
<p>Sleep > a month of studying.</p>
<p>This is happening to me too. I spent months of studying, used many books, and I don’t see any improvement on the scores. Anyone has a better strategy?</p>