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ACT and SAT: Eight Major Differences

Discusses the eight major differences between the ACT and the SAT. A great way for college-bound students and thier parents to decide which test is right for them.

ACT and SAT: eight major differences


1) ACT includes trigonometry; SAT does not.

 

2) ACT includes "science reasoning", which is logical reasoning based on data and scientific terms, but not based on classroom science.

 

3) SAT deducts points for wrong answers. However with coaching, students can actually use this to their ADVANTAGE.

 

4) SAT Math demands scrutinizing the English aspect of math questions. ACT is more straightforward, making it a more comfortable test, but not necessarily easier. ACT math can include logarithms, high level exponent problems, and matrices; SAT does not.

 

5) SAT directly tests vocabulary. This rewards students who are big readers or good vocabulary absorbers.

 

6) SAT Reading is generally less interesting and the answers rely more on nuance.

 

7) SAT requires a 25 minute essay. ACT’s essay (30 min.) is optional now.

 

7A) Optional essays typically mean a student with high aims must do them or look like a laggard. The optional ACT essay will typically ask about familiar "school-related" things that American teens are familiar with: "should dress codes be used in school?", " should students receive academic credit for community service?" , and "should varsity athletes be allowed a less-demanding class load?" are among the recent ACT topics.

 

SAT essay topics are typically philosophical: "Are there heroes in the modern world?", "is effort involved in pursuing any goal valuable?", "should people prefer new ideas or values to those of the past?", and "is there value for people to belong only to groups in which they have something in common?" were recent SAT prompts.

 



8) One difference that could be considered "major" is colleges’ USE of the SAT vs ACT: Almost all colleges "cherry-pick" SAT sub-scores, meaning they consider the best combination of Math, CR and Writing earned on different dates. Only a minority of the "most competitive" colleges do this with the four ACT sub-scores. Thus, a student who does not ping strong scores on all ACT sections on the same day, is being dragged down by one or more weaker sections, whereas cherry-picking SAT scores means one weak section on one day does not hurt.

 



Our suggestions:

 

Make an early comparison. Buy The Official SAT Study Guide ISBN # 087447-852-5 and take any two of the first three full length tests under timed conditions.

Buy The Real ACT Prep Guide ISBN # 07689-3440-0 and take any two of the five tests therein under timed conditions. Score them and use the accompanying table to compare the non-Writing sections (1600 SAT scale) with one another.

 



If you really need to save time, you need not do the Writing sections for either

(they compare almost the same). SAT's two multiple choice Writing Sections and ACT's first section ("English") are almost the same. And the Essay (Section 1 on an SAT and the last section on the ACT) are almost the same. Students may skip these sections and thereby save time. SAT thus becomes a six-section test (2.5 hours) and ACT becomes a three section test (2.25 hours).

 





Absent a comparison (or if the comparison shows nearly identical scores): most students seeking admission to competitive colleges who are capable of absorbing vocabulary should study for SAT and disregard ACT if scores are strong. Add ACT prep if after two post-tutoring SATs the scores are unlikely to impress your target colleges.

 



Our equally important suggestion: START EARLY. Colleges credit the best score, so it’s important to have three or more opportunities to take these tests. With vacations, proms, and graduations, that means the students who plan in advance will have the best opportunities. This is especially true for families that want to take advantage of Early Decision. For students who’ve had a semester each of

Algebra and Geometry by the end of sophomore year, the summer before junior year and/or the fall of junior year are usually the best times to prep.


ACT vs. SAT Summary as of August 2012


"English" "Writing"


Essay 30 min (optional, at end) Essay 25 min (required, at beginning)

 

Grammar Grammar

 

60 min 75 questions 35 min 49 questions


Math Math


60 min 60 questions 70 min 54 questions

 

Need trigonometry, matrices No trigonometry, logs, matrices, or and complex numbers complex numbers


Reading

"Critical Reading"


35 min 40 questions 70 min 67 questions

 



4 passages 4 passages + 19 Sentence Completion questions.

 



Science reasoning

 

35 min 40 questions no science

 

7 experiments

 



Equating Section Equating section


No equating section 25 min Math, Reading, or Writing

 



3 hrs 10 min + 30min optional writing 3 hrs 45 min

 

Approx 25 min extraneous time Approx 45 min extraneous time

 

$35 + $15 if doing Writing $49

 





Superscoring – still a minority of the Superscoring – by almost all colleges; most competitive colleges. Univ of Calif are 10 of the 12 exceptions.

 



"Score Choice" - yes "Score Choice" – yes

 

Score Choice is not being adhered to by many colleges, which are asking to see all scores. However, all these colleges claim to assess students on their best

scores.


Bottom Line: the tests are similar. No college requires one over the other, and to our knowledge, no college has a preference. ACT remains a bit broader in content. ACT to a slight degree tests knowledge a bit more than resourcefulness. Knowledge AND resourcefulness are "coach-able".


***********************************************************************************************************


Ivy Bound / Rising Scores offers tutoring and

ACT / SAT Prep classes in 21 states. Ivy

Bound instructors include college students, grad students, and seasoned school

teachers who have all scored among the top 1% on the SAT or ACT. Ivy Bound’s flexibility appeals to many busy

students and parents. The group is able

to hold classes in any community and is often invited to hold classes in

schools that have been underserved by some of the larger test prep

organizations. Most Ivy Bound SAT prep classes are held on weekends at schools,

churches, synagogues, & community centers.

Ivy Bound also holds small classes in parents’ homes where a parent or

student garners students with similar schedules and similar abilities. Ivy Bound offers private and semi-private

tutoring for the SAT, ACT, SAT II and most AP tests.


*********************************************************************************


Below is a list from Jennifer Tabbushof Los-Angeles-based Headed For College of colleges that are super-scoring the ACT as of fall 2010:

 

Albion College 

 



 

American

University 

 



 

Amherst College 

 



 

Babson College 

 



 

Beloit College 

 



 

Birmingham

Southern College 

 



 

Boston College 

 



 

Brandeis

University 

 



 

Brown University 

 



 

Bryn Mawr College 

 



 

Butler University 

 



 

California

Institute of Technology 

 



 

California

State University System 

 



 

Carnegie

Mellon University 

 



 

Colby College 

 



 

Connecticut

College 

 



 

DePauw University 

 



 

Eckerd College 

 



 

Elon University 

 



 

Florida

Atlantic University 

 



 

Florida State

University 

 



 

Fordham

University 

 



 

Georgia Tech 

 



 

Hamilton College 

 



 

Hampden-Sydney

College 

 



 

Haverford

College 

 



 

Hawaii

Pacific University 

 



 

Hendrix College 

 



 

Hollins

University 

 



 

Kalamazoo College 

 



 

Kenyon College 

 



 

Lawrence

University 

 



 

Loyola

University in Maryland 

 



 

MIT 

 



 

Millsaps College 

 



 

NCAA Clearinghouse 

 



 

New York University 

 



 

Northeastern

University 

 



 

North

Carolina State University 

 



 

Franklin

W. Olin College of Engineering 

 



 

Pennsylvania

State University 

 



 

Pepperdine

University 

 



 

Pitzer College 

 



 

Pomona College 

 



 

Regis University 

 



 

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology 

 



 

Spring Hill College 

 



 

Stanford

University 

 



 

Towson University 

 



 

Trinity College 

 



 

Tufts University 

 



 

United

States Naval Academy 

 



 

University

of Arkansas – Fayetteville 

 



 

University

of Colorado – Boulder 

 



 

University

of Connecticut 

 



 

University of

Dayton 

 



 

University of Delaware 

 



 

University of

Denver 

 



 

University of

Illinois 

 



 

University

of Louisiana – Lafayette 

 



 

University of

Miami 

 



 

University

of Puget Sound 

 



 

University

of San Diego 

 



 

University

of South Florida 

 



 

University of Tampa 

 



 

University of

Tennessee – Knoxville 

 



 

Washington

and Lee University 

 



 

Washington

State University 

 



 

Washington

University – St. Louis 

 



 

Wesleyan

University 

 



 

Xavier University

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