The Best Way to Study and Practice for ACT Science

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The ACT Science is like a double rainbow: unique, complicated to understand, and people freak out when they see it. Unlike a double rainbow, which tends to freak people out because of its awesomeness, the ACT Science section tends to freak people out because of the crazy time crunch with only 35 minutes to answer 40 questions.

Even so, if you want to do well on the ACT Science, you can't avoid it. You have to buckle down and create a great study plan. The good news is there are several easy steps to take to make sure you are studying for the ACT Science section in the right way.

Here is an overview of what this guide covers:

Step 1: Study With Official Materials

This step may seem obvious, but in order to get the most out of your studying, you need to study with ACT Science specific material. As I said before, the ACT Science section is unlike other science tests you've taken; your AP or IB science study materials will not help you here. You need to find ACT study materials that you like working with and that fit your study schedule.

The highest quality source of practice tests is almost always official ACT practice tests.

If you like my approach below, you’ll love PrepScholar’s program. We do the heavy lifting for you, by splitting up our prep material into specific skills. We'll detect your weaknesses automatically and give you focused lessons and quizzes to improve those skills.

Also, check out our article on recommended ACT prep books. You should take a minimum of four full-length practice ACT Science sections before your test date.

Step 2: Stick to the Real Timing

The ACT Science section is the tightest time crunch of any section of the test: 7 passages, 40 questions, 35 minutes, leaving only 52.5 seconds to answer each question.

You need to keep yourself to a five minutes per passage pace. If you do not do this in your practice, you will not be able to do it the day of the test. You should be taking a minimum of four practice tests, but I'd argue you should take around seven to eight practice ACT Science sections to nail this timing.

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Don't disturb the dragon.

Step 3: Review Your Mistakes

This is the MOST important step of all.

After taking your practice test, don't just score your test and move on to the next one. You need to actually review your mistakes.

When reviewing practice tests, people tend to have some or all of these wrong impulses:

These impulses are not helpful! Review is the most important step in your study process. It is how you learn and improve.

Your review of your ACT Science questions should be different depending on the type of passage. If you do not know the three types of ACT Science Passages, I recommend reading our other article first before continuing to read this article.

As a brief review, there are three types of ACT Science Passages:

Data Representation Passages and Research Summary Passages are very similar. Both use visuals (graphs, tables, etc.) as the primary way to convey information. We will evaluate your mistakes for both in the same way.

Conflicting Viewpoints Passages are the most unique since they typically do not have any visuals. We will use a different approach for evaluating your mistakes.

Reviewing Research Summary and Data Representation Passages

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We can't always be invincible.

Start by analyzing your confidence for each question. Categorize each question as skipped, guessed (after process of elimination), or (you thought you) knew. Do this for all questions even the ones you got right. Be sure to review all questions that you skipped or guessed (even if you got some of the guessed ones right).

For the skipped questions: Why did you skip? Did you run out of time? You should never skip on the ACT since there is no penalty for guessing. Make sure you leave yourself enough time at the end to at least pick a letter to bubble in for the remaining questions.

For the guessed questions: Why did you guess right? Why did you guess wrong? Is there a difference in the way you approached the guessed questions you got right versus those you got wrong?

  1. Misreading the visuals
  2. Not understanding a trend
  3. Not understanding the setup of the experiment
  4. Misreading the passage
  5. Not knowing a science fact
  6. Careless error

I will go into more detail on each type of mistake below.

Mistake Type 1: Misreading the Visuals

This is one of the most common mistakes since it's easy to do, and it applies to a lot of questions in ACT science.

If you read our article on the three types of act science passages, this mistake is usually connected to factual questions and interpreting experiments questions. Did you not read the graphs, tables, scatterplots or diagrams correctly? If so, what did you misread? What did you not understand? Make sure to drill this skill, as it is the most tested on the ACT Science section. Here is an example of a factual question:

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There are several mistakes you can make when misreading graphs.