How to Improve Low ACT Math Scores: 9 Tips From a Perfect Scorer

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Are you struggling with ACT Math scores between 14-24? You're not alone - hundreds of thousands of other students are scoring in this range. But many don't know the best ways to break out of this score range and get 26+ on the ACT.

Here we'll discuss how to improve ACT Math score effectively, and why it's so important to do so. Put these principles to work and I'm confident you'll be able to improve your score.

Brief note: This article is tailored for lower-scoring students, currently scoring below a 26 on ACT Math. If you're already above this range, my perfect 36 ACT Math score article will be better for you as it contains advanced strategies.

In this article, I'm going to discuss why scoring high is a good idea, what it takes to score a 26, and then go into ACT Math tips.

Stick with me - this is like constructing a building. First you need to lay a good foundation before putting up the walls and windows. Similarly, we need to first understand why you're doing what you're doing, before diving into tips and strategies.

In this guide, I talk mainly about getting to a 26. But if your goal is to get to a 24 or lower, these tips still equally apply.

Understand the Stakes

At this ACT score range, improving your low ACT Math score to a 26 range will dramatically boost your chances of getting into better colleges.

The reason? A 26 puts you well above the national average of all ACT test takers, at about 83%ile. This is roughly equivalent to a 1200 out of 1600 on the SAT.

Let's take a popular school, Pennsylvania State University, as an example.

Its average ACT score is a 27. Its 25th percentile score is a 24, and 75th percentile is a 29.

Furthermore, its acceptance rate is 55%. In other words, a little more than half of all applicants are admitted. Good odds, but the lower your scores, the worse your chances.

In our analysis, if you apply with an ACT score of 22, your chance of admission drops to 22.4%, or around a 1 in 4 chance.

But if you raise your score to a 26, your chance of admission goes up to 46.7% - double the chances of admission, for just 4 points of improvement.

And because your ACT Math score factors into your ACT composite score, raising your Math score will really help raise the average of your total score.

It's really worth your time to improve your ACT score. Hour for hour, it's the best thing you can do to raise your chance of getting into college.

Curious what chances you have with a 26 ACT score? Check out our expert college admissions guide for a 26 ACT score .

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Know that You Can Do It

This isn't just some lame inspirational message you see on the back of a milk carton.

I mean, literally, you and every other student can do this.

In my work with PrepScholar, I've worked with thousands of students scoring in the lower ranges of 15-21.

Time after time, I see students who beat themselves up over their low score and think improving it is impossible. "I know I'm not smart." "I just don't get algebra and I can't see myself scoring high." "I don't know what to study to improve my score."

It breaks my heart.

Because I know that more than anything else, your ACT score is a reflection of how hard you work and how smartly you study.

Not your IQ and not your school grades. Not how Ms. Huffington in 9th grade said you'd never get geometry.

Here's why: the ACT is a weird test. When you take it, don't you get the sense that the questions are often different from straightforward math questions you've seen in school?

It's purposely designed this way. The ACT can't test difficult concepts, because this would be unfair for students who aren't yet at Calculus level. It can't ask you to analyze quantum physics. The ACT is a national test, which means it needs a level playing field for all students around the country.

So it HAS to test concepts that all high school students will cover. Numbers (integers, fractions), algebra (solve for x), coordinate geometry (lines and slopes), plane geometry (triangles, circles, lines), and other topics like trigonometry.

You've learned all of this before in high school.

But the ACT still has to make the test difficult, so it needs to test these concepts in strange ways. This trips up students who don't prepare, but it rewards students who understand the test well.

Here's an example:

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This is a classic ACT type question. It tests really simple concepts in a complicated way.

The first time you see this, it might be confusing. How do I find the area of the entire area? How do I find the area of A? Why does this look like a brick wall?

But you've learned all the concepts you need to solve this.

This is a simple question about areas and fractions.

As the first sentence tells us, there are three rows of equal area. Each of these rows are split up into two, three or four equal areas. Each region is labeled A, B or C. The question is asking us for the fraction of the square's area in the region labeled A.

Notice that there are three regions labeled A - one in each row.

Let's use a strategy to solve this - let's plug in a number. We'll use 12 for the area of a row. Because there are 3 rows, the total area is 36.

In the first row, there are 2 equal regions - A and B. To divide 12 into 2 regions, each would have area 6. So A in the first row has 6 area.

In the next row, there are 3 equal regions - A, B, and C. Once again, to divide 12 into 3 regions, each would have area 4. So A in the second row has 4 area.

Finally, in the last row there are 4 equal regions - A, B, C, and D. To divide 12 into 4 regions, each would have area 3. So A in the third row has 3 area.

So what's the total area covered by A? 6 + 4 + 3 = 13.

What's the total area of the square? We said it above - 36.

So the "fraction of the square's area..in a region labeled A" is 13/36.

This might have been confusing the first time, but the next time you see a question like this, you'll know what to do.

The ACT math section is full of examples like this.

To improve your score, you just need to:

I'll go into more detail about exactly how to do this. First, let's see how many questions you need to get right.

What It Takes to Get a 26 in ACT Math

If we have a target ACT score in mind, it helps to understand how many questions you need to get right on the actual test.

The ACT Math section has 60 questions on it. Depending on how many questions you get right, you'll get a Scaled score out of 36.

Here's the raw score to ACT Math Score conversion table. (If you could use a refresher on how the ACT is scored and how raw scores are calculated, read this.)

Scaled Raw Scaled Raw Scaled Raw Scaled Raw
36 60 27 43-44 18 24-26 9 -
35 58-59 26 40-42 17 21-23 8 3
34 57 25 38-39 16 17-20 7 -
33 55-56 24 36-37 15 13-16 6 2
32 54 23 34-35 14 11-12 5 -
31 52-53 22 32-33 13 8-10 4 1
30 50-51 21 30-31 12 7 3 -
29 48-49 20 29 11 5-6 2 -
28 45-47 19 27-28 10 4 1 0

So if you're aiming for a 26, on this test you need to get just 40 questions correct. This is just a 66% on the test!

Also, keep in mind that you'll be able to GUESS on a lot of questions. Because there are five answer choices, you get a lot of questions right with a 20% chance!

So here's an example. Let's say you know how to solve just 35 questions for sure. You guess on the remaining 25 and get five of them right by chance. This gives you a raw score of 40, or a scaled score of 26!

This has serious implications for your testing strategy. In essence, you only need to answer 2/3 of all questions right. We'll go into more detail below about what this means for your testing strategy below.

Whatever you're scoring now, take note of the difference you need to get to a 26. For example, if you're scoring a 22, you need to answer 8-10 more questions right to get to a 26.

Once again, if your goal is a score below 26, like a 24, the same analysis applies. Just look up what your Raw Score demands above.

9 Strategies to Improve Your Low ACT Math Score

OK - so we've covered why scoring a higher ACT Math score is important, why you specifically are capable of improving your score, and the raw score you need to get to your target.

Now we'll actually get into actionable ACT Math tips that you should use in your own studying to maximize your score improvement.

Strategy 1: Skip the Most Difficult Math Questions

Here's the strategy I'm starting with, because I believe it can earn you immediate points the very next time you take a practice test. It's also an easy strategy most students don't do enough.

Remember what I said above about raw score? To score a 26, you only need a 40 out of 60 raw score.

Put in another way - you can completely miss 20 questions (33% of the test) and still score a 26.

Wow - you can completely skip the hardest 30% of all questions and still hit your goal.

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Skip questions carefree - like this woman.

Why is this such a powerful strategy?

It gives you WAY more time on easy and medium difficulty questions - the questions you have a good chance of getting right.

If you're usually pressed for time on ACT Math, this will be a huge help. And this is pretty much everyone - even I (a perfect ACT scorer) feel time pressure on this section.

Here's an example. On ACT Math, you get 60 minutes to answer 60 math questions. This is usually pretty hard for most students to get through - it's just 60 seconds to answer each question, and some of these questions take a lot of time.

The average student will try to push through ALL the questions.

"I've got to get through them all, since I've got a shot at getting each question right," they think. Along the way, they'll probably rush and make careless mistakes on easy questions they SHOULD have gotten right.

And then they spend five minutes on the very last, hardest question, making no progress and wasting time.

Wrong approach.

Here's what I suggest instead. Completely skip the last 20% of questions in the math section. This is the last 12 questions. Don't even look at them, don't even read them.

Instead, focus all your energy on getting the first 80% of questions correct.

This works because, unlike Reading and Writing, Math questions are ordered by difficulty. The hardest questions are always the questions at the end of the subsection.

Let's use an example from real practice tests. This is Question #60, the very last question of the section:

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Pretty tough, right? It'll take you quite some time just to even READ the question.

But here's question 39, a question you should spend more time on:

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This is just finding the slope, given two points. A lot easier for you to get right.

By skipping questions like this, you raise your time per question from 60 to 75 seconds per question. This is huge! It's a 25% boost to the time you get per question. This raises your chances of getting easy/medium questions right a lot.

And the 12 questions you skipped? Like the example above, they're so hard you're honestly better off not even trying them. These questions are meant for 27-36 scorers who have mastered all the ACT math skills on the test.

If you get to a 26, then you have the right to try these questions. Not before you to get to 26.

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Next strategy: find your weak links and fix them.

Strategy 2: Find Your Math Weaknesses and Drill Them

If you're like most students, you're better at some math subjects than others. You might have done better in algebra than geometry. Or maybe you really like trig, but hate probability.

If you're like most students, you also don't have an unlimited amount of time to study. You have a lot of homework, you might be an athlete or have band practice, and you want to send Snaps to your friends.

This means for every hour you study for the ACT, it needs to be the most effective hour possible.

In concrete terms, you need to find your greatest areas of improvement and work on those.

Too many students study the 'dumb' way. They just buy a book and read it cover to cover. When they don't improve, they're shocked.

Studying effectively for the ACT isn't like painting a house. You're not trying to paint thin layers across a huge span of material.

What these students did wrong was they wasted time on subjects they already knew, and they didn't spend enough time fixing their weaknesses.

Instead, studying effectively for the ACT is like plugging up the holes of a leaky boat. You need to find the biggest hole, and fill it. Then you find the next biggest hole, and you fix that. Soon you'll find that your boat isn't sinking at all.

How does this relate to ACT math? You need to find the skills that you're weakest in, and then drill those until you're no longer weak in them. Fixing up the biggest holes.

If you had to study 10 hours for ACT Math, wouldn't you rather improve four points than one point? This is how you do it - focusing your attention on what will make the biggest difference for you.

Here's our complete mapping of all 24 skills tested on ACT Math: