ACT Test Preparation

Erudite Advantage

  • Convenient and highly effective prep options
  • Test-prep and admissions expertise
  • Guaranteed results

Completely Personalized Prep

Course Benefits:

  • A tutor with the skills and style to meet your needs
  • The freedom to meet when and where you want
  • A plan to help you get into your top-choice schools

Course Features:

  • A custom prep plan designed by an erudite tutor
  • Frequent adjustments to match your progress
  • 4 core practice ACTs and 14 additional exams
  • In-person or web-based sessions

Comprehensive or pay-as-you-go programs

What is the ACT and why is it important?

  • Created by ACT Inc., the ACT is an entrance exam used by most colleges and universities to make admissions decisions. The idea (in theory, at least) is to provide colleges with one common criterion that can be used to compare all applicants. The weight placed on ACT scores varies from school to school. Other important factors that schools consider in their admission decisions are your high school GPA, academic transcripts, letters of recommendation, interviews and personal essays. For more specific information on the importance of ACT scores at the schools you're interested in, contact the admission offices directly.
  • The ACT is offered nationally every year in September, October, December, February*, April and June.

What specifically does the ACT test?

  • The ACT has four sections: English, Reading, Math and Science, as well as an optional 30-minute writing test. Some schools may require the writing test, so be sure to ask before you take it.

Should I take the SAT or the ACT?

  • SAT versus ACT. Is one harder? Is one better? More prestigious? More useful? If only it were that simple.

How is the ACT scored?

  • You'll earn one ACT score (1 to 36) on each test (English, Math, Reading and Science) and a composite ACT score, which is an average of these four tests. Usually, when people ask about your score, they're referring to your composite ACT score. The composite score falls between 1 and 36. The national average is about 21.
  • If, for example, you scored 31 on the English, 30 on the Math, 29 on the Reading and 30 on the Science, your composite ACT score would be 30.
  • You'll receive subscores in English, Math and Reading that range between 1 and 18. These scores provide you with more detail about your performance, but they are not actually used by colleges or universities.
  • The ACT includes an optional essay, known as the writing test. If you take the writing test, you will receive a writing test subscore and a combined English/writing score.

How do I know if my score is good enough to get me into my dream school?

  • Good question. Contact your school for the score required.

When should I take the ACT?

  • Students have traditionally taken the ACT in the spring of their junior year and, if necessary, again in the fall of their senior year. However, more and more students are choosing to take their first ACT earlier, such as during the fall of their junior year. This gives them more flexibility to retake the ACT test one or more times, or to take the SAT or SAT subject tests.

How do I register?

  • Registration deadlines fall approximately five weeks before each ACT Test Date

How can I prepare?

We can help. We have ACT preparation courses for every student and every budget.