ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized...

21
ACT Preparation

Transcript of ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized...

Page 1: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT Preparation

Page 2: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

What colleges look for?

Application(essays,

extra curriculars,

etc.)

Standardized tests

Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Page 3: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Frequently Asked Questions

• What are the national average ACT and SAT scores?

• What is a good score on the ACT and SAT?• Are there schools that prefer the SAT?

Page 4: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Structure of the ACT

5 SUBJECT AREAS

MATH READING SCIENCE

1–36pts. 1–36pts. 1–36pts.

75 Questions45 Minutes

ENGLISH WRITING( o p t i o n a l )

60 Questions60 Minutes

40 Questions35 Minutes

40 Questions35 Minutes

1 Essay30 Minutes

1–36pts. 2–12pts.

ACTCOMPOSITE

SCORE 1–36pts.TOTALTESTTIME

approximately

4hrs.

Page 5: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

English

Page 6: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT English

• Nuts & Bolts (commas, pronouns, verbs)• Style (fragments, modifiers, tone)• Student as editor (revision, sequencing)

Example:

The Navajo language is complex, with a structure and sounds that makes them 8

unintelligible to anyone without extensive exposure to it.

F. NO CHANGEG. makes itH. make itJ. make them

Page 7: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

3 Helpful Reminders for Students

• Don’t stop reading as soon as you get to the underlined portion

• Occasionally you’ll see two underlined parts within the same sentence

• Sometimes key contextual clues will be in the sentence(s) BEFORE or AFTER the underlined part

Page 8: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Math

Page 9: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Math Content

• Basic Math (6-8 questions)– Decimals, fractions, percentages, averages

• Algebra (14-16 questions)– Solving for a variable, ratio/proportion, simplification, inequalities

• Plane Geometry (14-16 questions)– Area, triangles, circles, angles, Pythagorean theorem

• Coordinate Geometry (6-8 questions)– Slope, distance formula, midpoint

• Intermediate Algebra (6-8 questions)– Simultaneous equations, quadratics, functions, logarithms

• Trigonometry (3-4 questions)

Page 10: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

What makes math so difficult?

• Concepts are interspersed almost randomly throughout the section

• Questions are asked in unusual ways• Problems are often multi-step, combining

several math concepts

Page 11: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT Math

• Algebra, Geometry, & Trigonometry• I-S-M-E

Example: If + = and A, B, and x

are integers greater than 1, then what must x equal?

A. 9B. 135C. 210D. 630E. 3,150

A30

B105

7A + 2Bx

Page 12: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Reading

Page 13: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT Reading

• Prose Fiction, Social Sciences, Humanities & Natural Sciences

• 4 long passages, 2 key strategies1. Two-Track Mind2. Eliminating Wrong Answers

Questions on the ACT deal with MAIN IDEAS and PEOPLE.

THINK BIG PICTURE!

Page 14: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

SOCIAL SCIENCE: This passage is adapted from volume 2 of Blanche Wiesen Cook’s biography Eleanor Roosevelt (©1999 by Blanche Wiesen Cook).

Eleanor Roosevelt [ER] is the most controversial First Lady in United States history. Her journey to greatness, her voyage out beyond the confines of good wife and devoted mother, involved determination and amazing courage. It also involved one of history’s most unique partnerships. Franklin Delano Roosevelt [FDR] admired his wife, appreciated her strengths, and depended on her integrity.

However, ER and FDR had different priorities, occasionally competing goals, and often disagreed. In the White House they ran two distinct and separate courts.

By 1933 [her first year as First Lady], ER was an accomplished woman who had achieved several of her life’s goals. With her partners, ER was a businesswoman who co-owned the Val-Kill crafts factory, a political leader who edited and copublished the Women’s Democratic News, and an educator who co-owned and taught at a New York school for girls.

As First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt did things that had never been done before. She upset race traditions, championed a New Deal for women, and on certain issues actually ran a parallel administration. On housing and the creation of model communities, for example, ER made decisions and engineered policy.

At the center of a network of influential women who ran the Women’s Committee of the Democratic Party led by Molly Dewson, ER worked closely with the women who had dominated the nation’s social reform struggles for decades. With FDR’s election, the goals of the great progressive pioneers, Jane Addams, Florence Kelley, and Lillian Wald, were at last at the forefront of the country’s agenda. ER’s mentors since 1903, they had battled on the margins of national politics since the 1880s for public health, universal education, community centers, sanitation programs, and government responsibility for the welfare of the nation’s poor and neglected people.

Now their views were brought directly into the White House. ER lobbied for them personally with her new administrative allies, in countless auditoriums, as a radio broadcaster, and in monthly, weekly, and, by 1936, daily columns. Called “Eleanor Everywhere,” she was interested in everyone.

Every life was sacred and worthy, to be improved by education, employment, health care, and affordable housing. Her goal was simple, a life of dignity and decency for all. She was uninterested in complex theories, and demanded action for betterment. She feared violent revolution, but was not afraid of socialism—and she courted radicals.

As fascism and communism triumphed in Europe and Asia, ER and FDR were certain that there was a middle way, what ER called an American “revolution without bloodshed.” Her abiding conviction, however, was that nothing good would happen to promote the people’s interest unless the people themselves organized to demand government responses. A people’s movement required active citizen participation, and ER’s self-appointed task was to agitate and inspire community action, encourage united democratic movements for change.

Between 1933 and 1938, while the Depression raged and the New Deal unfolded, ER worked with the popular front. She called for alliances of activists to fight poverty and racism at home, and to oppose isolationism internationally.

Active with the women’s peace movement, ER spoke regularly at meetings of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and the Conference on the Cause and Cure of War. She departed, however, from pacifist and isolationist positions and encouraged military preparedness, collective security, and ever-widening alliances.

Between 1933 and 1938 ER published countless articles and six books. She wrote in part for herself, to clear her mind and focus her thoughts. But she also wrote to disagree with her husband. From that time to this, no other First Lady has actually rushed for her pen to jab her husband’s public decisions. But ER did so routinely, including in her 1938 essay This Troubled World, which was a point-by-point rejection of FDR’s major international decisions.

To contemplate ER’s life of example and responsibility is to forestall gloom. She understood, above all, that politics is not an isolated individualist adventure. She sought alliances, created community, worked with movements for justice and peace. Against great odds, and under terrific pressure, she refused to withdraw from controversy. She brought her network of agitators and activists into the White House, and never considered a political setback a permanent defeat. She enjoyed the game, and weathered the abuse.

Page 15: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Science

Page 16: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Science Content

• 3 types of passages– Charts and graphs– Multiple experiments– Debating scientists/no pictures

• 80% of the questions require students to simply interpret graphs, charts, and tables

Page 17: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT Science

• Not a science content test!• Ability to interpret charts and graphsPassage I Measles is an extremely contagious viral

infection spread by the respiratory route. Figure 1 shows the course of measles from time of exposure to recovery from the infection.

After recovery from measles, the infected individual develops immunity or resistance to re-infection. Figure 1 shows the development of immunity indicated by the antibody level.

Page 18: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)
Page 19: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Essay

Page 20: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

ACT Essay

• 30 Minutes• One essay prompt asking you to take a

position– Prompts are typically about a school-related issue

1. Read the prompt2. Take a point and STICK TO IT3. Let I-B-C be your guide!

Page 21: ACT Preparation. What colleges look for? Application (essays, extra curriculars, etc.) Standardized tests Transcript (grades, and what classes you take)

Test Prep Options

What is the best option for your students?

1) Prep on your own

2) Classroom program

3) Hybrid program

4) Individual Tutoring