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ACT PREParation guide

Published on Nov 26, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

ACT PREParation guide

By: William Phillips
Photo by 7D-Kenny

Basic Needs

  • Test starts at 8 AM so go to sleep on time the night prior to the ACT Test
  • Wake up, and eat a nice, healthy, balanced breafast
  • Bring a snack for the break in between Math and Reading
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What To bring

  • All test takers are responsible for bringing their own calculator
  • The calculator you bring should be one that you feel comfortable with
  • Make sure you dress to accommodate for the temperature in the room
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Time

  • Not every class has a clock/countdown for you to keep track of time
  • Suggest bringing a watch to manage your time
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Avoiding Whiplash

  • For English, complete each passage and then bubble in your answers
  • For Math, complete one whole page before bubbling in answers
  • For Reading, complete each passage and then bubble in 
  • For Science complete each activity (5-7 questions) and then bubble in
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Leave nothing blank

  • The Act Test does not penalize for wrong answers
  • Make sure you have the whole test completed

English test

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"No change" answer choice

  • The "NO CHANGE" answer choice will be correct about 16 times 
  • If you see no errors in your reading, mark this answer choice
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What makes answer choices different

  • Some questions may include may include answer choices that look similar
  • Make sure to distinguish between each answer choice
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Rules of the Semicolon

  • Make sure to memorize the rules of using semicolons.
  • They are used to separate closely related independent clauses
  • Also separates independent clauses linked with transitional phrases 
  • Semicolons can be replaced with periods to form to independent sentences
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colons

  • The colon is a very rarely seen on the ACT test
  • It has two primary uses
  • To begin a business letter or to introduce a list or example
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Fragment Checks

  • The ACT test makes spotting sentence fragments very tricky
  • The fragments that you will most likely see on the ACT will be long unfinis
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Commas

  • This is the punctuation mark you will be seeing the most on the ACT
  • They are used most often to set off a parenthetical phrase
  • Parenthetical Phrases add information to a sentence
  • The sentence can still make sense without these parenthetical phrases
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dashes

  • Dashes, just like commas, can set off parenthetical phrases
  • They also signify appositive or to indicate a break or pause in thought
  • They can also take the place of parentheses
  • Most likely, the ACT will test you on the rule in which commas and dashes c
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Distinguishing between contractions and possessives

  • Several different questions on the ACT will involve apostrophes
  • These questions will test you by offering contractions and possessive as op
  • Make sure to study apostrophe use and know how to tell contractions from po

Omit and delete

  • These answer choices are disproportionately correct 
  • Make sure to keep an eye out for useless information
  • This information will most likely not fit the tone of the passage
  • Take a look at context clues to help
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Verb agreement

  • There are primarily two ways in which verb agreement will be assessed
  • One: Verb Tense. Take a look at the context of the story 
  • And find out whether the story is in present, past, or future tense.
  • Select the answer which follows the tense of the passage
  • Second: Subject Verb Agreement. Some questions will separate the verb from 
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Avoiding redundancy

  • Keep an eye out for unnecessarily wordy sentences 
  • A lot of times, these sentences will be redundant 
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Pronouns

  • Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
  • Questions that involve this will want to simply know
  • if the pronoun agrees with the noun it stands for.
  • Keep and eye out for gender, and number.
  • Those two factors affect what the pronoun will be.
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Who vs whom vs Which vs that

  • The word "who" is usually part of the subject
  • It generally starts sentences off
  • "Whom" is typically part of the direct/indirect object
  • "That" and "Which" do not typically refer to all nouns
  • They refer to objects, not people
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pronoun-antecedent clarity

  • Questions related to pronouns will often test you on this agreement
  • They will ask you to whom the pronoun is referring to
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Parallelism

  • Parallelism is the consistency within a sentence
  • This consistency gives a sentence rhythm 
  • Ex. She had three goals in life: to skydive, to bungee jump, and to scuba d
  • Notice how each verb agrees with one another.
  • The wrong choice is: "to go skydiving, to bungee jump, and to scuba dive" 
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Rhetorical skills

  • The is generally considered the most difficult of questions
  • One must know how to: Determine the effect of adding/removing a sentence
  • Select the sentence that best introduces a paragraph 
  • Select the sentence that best achieves a desired effect
  • Determine whether or not the passage has achieved a stated purpose
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Mathematics test

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Content covered

  • Algebra- 33 Questions
  • Geometry- 23 Questions
  • Trigonometry- 4 Questions
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MAnaging time on the math test

  • The first 20 questions of the Math test are generally the easiest
  • And the last 20 questions are generally the hardest
  • Keep this in mind and remember that if you want to finish the test,
  • you must manage your time wisely. 
  • Do not spend too much time on the first problems.
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Take advantage of answer choices

  • If a question involves an equation in which you can plug answer into
  • And you feel that plugging in answers will be faster than solving
  • Do it that way and plug you choices into the question
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Traditional method

  • David=x, Shawn=3x, Heidi=3x. Total is 210.
  • Setup an equation
  • x+3x+3x=210, now solve
  • 7x=210
  • x=30
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Angles

  • It is important to have an understanding of angle properties
  • Many different concepts are assessed on the Math Test
  • Here are the most important: Triangle Sum Theory, 360 degrees in a circle
  • Supplementary Angles, Complementary Angles, Vertical Angles, 
  • and Corresponding angles.
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Perimeter

  • Many of the questions related to perimeter will include real-life situation
  • It will be your job to know what information is relevant 

Slope and probability

  • Make sure you are able to determine slope given two points
  • Make sure you know how to find the slope from the equation of the line
  • Probability is also assessed on the Math test. These questions are generall
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more content covered

  • Make sure to have a good understanding on the following:
  • Exponent Rules
  • Scientific Notation
  • Distance and Mid-point Formulas
  • Pythagorean Theorem 
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Science

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Ignore the introduction

  • Skip the Science introduction
  • It is unnecessary information that will most likely confuse you 
  • It is also a big waste of valuable test taking time
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Don't study

  • The same thing goes for science as it does for reading
  • Attempting to study the passage to understand its contents is unnecessary
  • The information that will be in the experiments and graphs are usually comp
  • It is a waste of time if you try to understand this information
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