practical considerations<\/a> surrounding the act that many other books neglect. for example, it points out that high schools often have larger desks than colleges, making it easier for students to fully spread out their test booklet and answer choices. or that if you are prone to competition anxiety, you should sign up for a test location where you won\u2019t know many people.\u00a0 there\u2019s more here on mindset, stress management, etc. than you\u2019ll find in many other resources.<\/p>\nact-like questions<\/em>. some test prep resources baffle me with their shocking inability to model act questions. barron\u2019s does this well, although it definitely is lacking in tougher, more complex questions (see weaknesses below).<\/p>\ndesigned like a workbook<\/em>. barron\u2019s provides good structural elements for students to work their way through act review. the \u201cdiagnostic test analysis guide\u201d following the diagnostic test is a solid resource that helps students figure out what they need to focus on, whether that means punctuation, finding the main idea, trigonometry, etc. there are grammar drills to hammer concepts into a student\u2019s brain (and as dull and painful as they might be; they are effective).<\/p>\n <\/p>\n
weaknesses<\/h2>\n
questions are not hard enough. <\/em>the reading and science practice sets and tests are a little too straightforward, and all four sections are missing some of the more complex and nuanced questions the act has been throwing at students in recent years.<\/p>\nneglects some important act question types<\/em>. there are some key act question types that barron\u2019s omits in review chapters or on the practice tests. for example, almost every act math section includes a couple data interpretation sets (a series of 2-4 questions based on the same tables or graphs) and there are none in barron\u2019s. barron\u2019s also fails to fully prep students for questions that require outside knowledge on the act science.<\/p>\nwriting section is obsolete<\/em>. although the book does warn students that the writing test will be changing in 2015 (it most certainly did as of the september 2015 test), the advice in this chapter is still on the old essay. as of the date this blog was published, barron\u2019s has not released an updated edition of this book.<\/p>\noverall, barron\u2019s (along with barron\u2019s 36\u00a0) is a pretty solid resource and one of the few act prep books that i would recommend. it\u2019s not perfect, but it will help students feel much more comfortable on act test day.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
report card<\/h2>\n
strategy: b+<\/strong><\/p>\npractice tests: b+<\/strong><\/p>\nstyle points: b<\/strong><\/p>\nand, for a similar book from barron’s, check out barron’s act 36: aiming for the perfect score, 2nd edition<\/a>.
\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"as far as third-party act test prep books go, barron\u2019s act (2014) is one of the best. it\u2019s straightforward, friendly, and thorough–it will feel as comfortable to students as one of their high school textbooks. it\u2019s missing the hip flair of some other test prep books, but it gets the job done. most importantly, it\u2019s practice questions are pretty good. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":88,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[90],"tags":[82,15],"ppma_author":[24868],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
book review: barron\u2019s act - magoosh blog | high school<\/title>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\t\n\t\n\t\n