<p>What materials, drills, websites, etc. (if any) work well with the Barron's ACT 36 book EXCLUDING the Red Book and the Princeton Review 1297 Question book (I already own these two)? I'm looking to bump myself from a 34 to a 36 so any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!</p>
<p>Nothing much else. Those books + practice should suffice if you’re truly capable of getting a 36.</p>
<p>Alright, thank you!</p>
<p>I recommend Dissecting the ACT 2.0 or Brainiac ACT.</p>
<p>34-36 it seems like mostly luck to me. If you can get a 34 there isn’t really much more you need to know. What would be bad at this point would be to burn yourself out.</p>
<p>Edit: I dont have any data to back this up, just the way it has seemed to me through my ACT experience.</p>
<p>^ Actually, the people who score 35/36 can usually do so consistently; it’s not just a matter of luck.</p>
<p>Personally, I cannot seem to score higher than 34.25, because I sometimes don’t know how to do a problem in math, or make a silly mistake. Generally tends to be the latter (ie: I plug in .4 rather than .04, etc.). A lot of the time, the method the solve the question was so plain that I somehow managed to miss it, haha. Once, I had the base of a triangle, which was diameter the a circle, and was asked to find area. I failed to notice the height was the radius, I felt like slapping myself for not seeing that haha. </p>
<p>Anyways, goes to show there’s definitely something that needs to be there for a 36. Usually people who generally score 34’s don’t get lucky and get 36, lol.</p>
<p>^I was actually speaking from experience since I went from 34-36 with no prep but thanks for “correcting” me.</p>