the real guide<\/em> or practice with released official tests you can get from friends or tutors who have used the test information release service.<\/p>\nthe reason many, many practice tests are particularly helpful for the act is because the act is very repetitive and predictable–it uses the same question types over and over (and over). the rationales behind the correct answer choices are often equally as predictable. but a certain oddball question type might not repeat itself for a few tests, so you want to make sure you have as much exposure to act questions as possible.<\/p>\n
tip 2: remember you don\u2019t have to get every question right to get a perfect score.<\/h3>\n
i know that you’re already pretty aware of this right now, but it’s important to remember on test day, as well! why?<\/p>\n
well, first of all it means don\u2019t freak out and get hung up on one troublesome question and waste time you could be spending on others. make eliminations, take your best guess and focus on the rest of the questions.<\/p>\n
it also means that for a perfect score, you want to make sure you are really focusing on your strengths. i am sure you are very strong across the board if you are shooting for a 36, but you might feel more comfortable with english instead of science, for example. this means you need to be very careful on english. don\u2019t get overconfident: take your full time on the sections that are typically a breeze for you, read very carefully, and practice good test taking strategies. because if you want a perfect composite score, you are going to want to make sure you get a perfect section score in your strongest subjects.<\/p>\n
tip 3: practice seeing the test from the test makers\u2019 perspective.<\/h3>\n
this means considering where they are expecting you to trip up and also how they create answer choices that can be defended as irrefutably correct. so after you do practice tests, don\u2019t just check off all the questions you got right and move on. if you are scoring in the upper 30s already, you aren\u2019t going to learn as much as you need to by just reviewing the handful of questions you got wrong. instead, go back through the entire test and look at the answer choices for each question. look at things such as how the test makers\u2019 are creating tempting wrong answer choices on each individual section and how they test the same concepts over and over. check to see if there is a smarter strategy you could have employed to get the answer faster. thinking about the test from the test makers\u2019 perspective will help you avoid expected traps and help you finish questions more quickly so you have time to check your work.<\/p>\n
bonus tip: let it go.<\/h3>\n
finally, remember that getting a perfect score is really, really hard, and really, really rare. and it seriously requires a stroke of good luck\u2014you need the stars to perfectly align on your particular administration of the test. only about 1400 out of the 1.8 million students who took the act in last year\u2019s graduating class got a perfect score. so it\u2019s possible, but don\u2019t beat yourself up over it. a perfect 36 is a cool thing, but it isn’t the end-all, be-all of act scores<\/a>.<\/p>\nnevertheless, following these tips hopefully will help you increase your odds of a perfect score–or at least get you a little bit closer. and, as a bonus, someday you will make an amazing act tutor. \ud83d\ude42<\/p>\n
for even more tips to get that perfect (or very high) score<\/strong>, magoosh’s act expert, kristin, has some advice:<\/p>\n