<p>Definately. My score rose from a 31 to 33 (read my post above). just be sure to read through the practice book and take a lot of practice tests. </p>
<p>I’m confident that with SOME practice you could atleast get a 30 because you’ll know what you’re doing. just get comfortable and develop your own personal strategies and you could atleast get a 30+</p>
<p>shoot me now :[[[
C:31
English:34
Math:36
Reading:27
Science:27</p>
<p>It’s my first time, and im def. gonna take it again. so weird cuz i got 34 and 34 on reading and science on a real ACT practice test. i had time management issues on reading and science as u can see lololol. kinda expected it but o wello.</p>
<p>do u think if u already tried once or twice today using the hack and ur scores were not up, they are not going to be up for the whole day? or i should keep checking back?</p>
<p>Dexter, same thing happened to me. I think we must have really had like 17.5 subscores, and so while it rounded up to 18 for our subscores, it was only 35 for our English scores.</p>
<p>How ACT figures the multiple-choice test scores and the Composite score</p>
<p>First we count the number of questions on each test that you answered correctly. We do not deduct any points for incorrect answers.</p>
<p>Then we convert your raw scores (number of correct answers) to “scale scores.” Scale scores have the same meaning for all the different versions of the ACT offered on different test dates.</p>
<p>Your Composite score and each test score (English, Mathematics, Reading, Science) range from 1 (low) to 36 (high). The Composite Score is the average of your four test scores, rounded to the nearest whole number.</p>
<p>We compute your seven subscores (Usage/Mechanics, Rhetorical Skills, etc.) in the same way, but subscores range from 1 (low) to 18 (high). There is no direct, arithmetic relationship between subscores and test score—this means your subscores usually won’t add up to your test score.</p>
<p>I would speculate that you got like 1 wrong wrong in each sub catagory thus each was an 18 while overall you got 2 wrong total and therefore was a 35. Or some such variation.</p>
<p>I cant believe this. Collegeboard is slow as heck. The June SAT was a week before the June ACT and the ACT scores are up almost a week before the SAT???</p>