Math is a subject that most students either love or hate. In either case, preparing thoroughly for the Math section of the ACT is important in order to do your best. If math is not your strongest subject, building a solid foundation of understanding will be important for maintaining a decent overall score. If math comes easily for you, reviewing will still be important in order to fill in the gaps in your knowledge, especially if you want your score to truly reflect your ability. Either way, this series of posts gives you valuable strategies that will help you maximize your score. This post is the second of a three part series that looks at strategies for acing the ACT Math section.
Strategy #4: Budget Your Time
Since the ACT is a timed test, using your time and focus effectively will have a huge effect on the outcome. Sixty minutes for sixty questions may seem like plenty of time, but the questions cover a range of difficulties, and some will take much longer than a minute, which means that others will have to take much less. For example, suppose you take two minutes to complete one problem. Then you will have to complete two problems in only thirty seconds to make up for this time. If it took you three minutes to answer one problem, you would have to answer three more in only twenty seconds each to stay on par. And a six-minute problem would cost you six ten-second problems! So, if a problem is taking too much time or draining your ability to focus, don’t be afraid to skip it and come back to it if you have time. Since all of the questions count the same regardless of their difficulty, the more you are able to answer the better.