<p>Maybe it has to do with the fact that you’ve been studying for the ACT since you started school. The day you start studying for the SAT, you have to pay up College Board.</p>
<p>it probably does, you’re right about that.</p>
<p>jesus this thread is long</p>
<p>Any thread where me and cjgone babble is bound to be long. :P</p>
<p>really random, but from my situation, what would be the easiest route to getting a 33+? For example, should i try to perfect science? do i keep doing english? do more reading passages? what?</p>
<p>ok well can someone help me with this score prediction. I have a 25 in math, english, and reading and a 23 in science. All of these are in the Barrons book.:(</p>
<p>I need AT LEAST a 28 to have a chance at most of the colleges I want to go to…</p>
<p>wait what… i’m so confused what’s going on…</p>
<p>can someone please predict my score cause i heard barrons is waaayyyy harder than the actual ACT and I have a composite of 25 in the barrons. so anyone?</p>
<p>“really random, but from my situation, what would be the easiest route to getting a 33+? For example, should i try to perfect science? do i keep doing english? do more reading passages? what?”</p>
<p>lol, somthing you need to consider is the fact that you can’t really just say “Ok, perfect science, BAM!”. You really just need to have the mindset of getting every single question on the test right for those higher levels.</p>
<p>“wait what… i’m so confused what’s going on…”</p>
<p>You need to just tell all of these people to get the heck off of your thread. They are just wanting to get in on all this great advice. ;)</p>
<p>Word of advice. The test prep books are NOT good score predictors. The tests in them are NOT close enough to the ACT to actually predict your score. The only one you can actually trust is The Real ACT (or Red book). It has three “retired” ACT tests, so your scores from that are MUCH more reliable. I have been working out of prep books and I can tell you that none of them are so good when it comes to practice tests. Test advice though is pretty good.</p>
<p>Haha for sure. Your advice is too good</p>
<p>“The tests in them are NOT close enough to the ACT to actually predict your score.”</p>
<p>They can usually be pretty darn accurate. I mean, sure an actual test from the RB will give you great accuracy, but review books are generally pretty diagnostic (except Barron’s).</p>