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ACT (examination)Formerly the American College Testing Program, or American College Test and now officially the ACT (pronounced A-C-T), the ACT is a college-entrance examination that emerged in 1959 as a competitor to the College Board's Scholastic Aptitude Test (now SAT). Versus the SAT, the ACT is more of an achievement test, while the SAT is more of an aptitude test. The ACT is more widely used in the midwest and southeast United States, while the SAT is more popular in the northeast and west coasts. Usage of the ACT by colleges has risen as a result of various criticisms of the effectiveness and fairness of the SAT. Students that are more comfortable with reading/writing than math also prefer the ACT because of the extra weight given to those sections. In some states, the ACT is taken by all high school students as a standard to measure schools and the students; in others it is an optional test for college acceptance. The ACT was developed by the University of Iowa and is an outgrowth of the Iowa Tests of Education Development. ACT incorporated, a not-for-profit organization based in Iowa City, Iowa now administers the test, as well as several other assessment tests in other fields. The ACT is divided into four sections: Writing, Reading, Math, and Science Reasoning. Based on performance in all sections, scores are tallied up and then reported on a scale of 1 to 36, 36 being the highest possible score. The average score is around 20 to 21. See alsoExternal linksThe contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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