Wednesday, February 29, 2012

What Is the Best Month to Take the ACT Test?


There are several months to take the ACT test. How do you know which is the best one? Well, first of all, the test is the same every time, so there is no advantage with the test being easier or harder. However, there are two very important considerations that can help you end up with a higher score.

The first consideration is that you will probably want to take the ACT test more than once to optimize your score. If that is the case, you will want to take the ACT test the first time during the Fall of your junior year. This will give you time to focus on the areas you need to improve upon before taking the test again in the Spring, when you will have the chance to do better.

Second, you will want to take the test in the month of December specifically, because that gives you the option of requesting a Test Information Report, for a small additional charge, which will be priceless. This report will give you the questions from the test so you can see exactly what you got wrong. With that information you will know exactly what to study to improve your score.

In order to be able to request a "TIR" you have to take the ACT test at a national test location. That means it is on the December date where it is being administered nationally, and not just at a few schools. To ensure you get the right date, simply register online through the ACT website.

This is just one way of working really smart to get the highest ACT test score you can. Another way to work smart is to learn by watching videos online whenever you have a couple of minutes, here and there.


Thursday, February 16, 2012

Why Is Reading a Key to Student Success?


Statistics indicate that only about one in four Americans read a book per year. The one greatest deficiency employers note in their employees is poor reading and writing skills, and companies spend billions each year on remedial courses for workers. J. C. Penney stated, "One of the saddest mistakes I made in years gone by was my utter neglect of reading." Abigail Van Buren said, "If I could give young people only one piece of advice, it would be read, read, read!"

Back in the day when books were less common and more expensive, the great preacher, Spurgeon, urged people to buy only the best most profitable books-those that would do the reader the most good. Locke follows up on that challenge with his statement that "reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge; it is thinking that makes what we read our own."

Nowadays in Western society some formal education is available for most of the young, and, where it is available, of course it should be enjoyed. However, the crucial value of reading cannot be over-emphasized. Dozens of famous and very productive individuals became successful largely through reading.

It is not secret that Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) left school at the age of thirteen for a learning pilgrimage which included stints as a delivery boy, grocery clerk, blacksmith's helper, typesetter, and river boat pilot. He became one of the most renowned writers in American history.

Abraham Lincoln failed twice in business before he reached the age of twenty-five, had a nervous breakdown and failed in seeking public office eight times before being elected the sixteenth president of the United States. In spite of the odds against him, Lincoln was a self-educated lawyer with not even a year of formal schooling. He is said to have walked for miles in pursuit of books, and, although he couldn't avail himself of multitudes of books, he set out to thoroughly understand everything he did read.

Research establishes that almost four million children in the United Kingdom do not even own a book. This causes concern that the rate of children growing up without books is rising, not falling. Youngsters from families of a lower economic level are even more likely to miss out. A recent report by the National Literacy Trust reported in a survey of 18,000 youngsters that almost a third - 3.8 million - do not have books of their own. And the figure has increased from seven years ago, the last time the poll was conducted, when it stood at one in ten.

These statistics also reveal that boys are more likely to be without books than girls, and children eligible for free school meals - a measure of poverty - are more likely to not own a book. The findings, not unsurprisingly, indicate that children who do own books are more likely to enjoy reading, read more books and read more frequently. They are also more likely to perform better at school. Just 7.6 percent of pupils who possess books of their own are reading below the expected level, against 19 percent of those that do not own books. This reflects cause for great concern. Researchers also concluded that 75% of children who read nine or more books a month read above the level expected of them, compared with 28.6% of those who read no books in a month. We must make good books available to our children. Then we must get our children reading by giving them books that will hook their interests. The statistics are almost guaranteed to be no better in the United States.