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Developing an ACT ‘Game Plan’

By Doug Buehl,
Madison East High School teacher
Member, Wisconsin State Reading Association

March 2002

It’s March Madness! All those months of preparation and now it’s crunch time. The stakes are high, clutch performances separate winners from losers, and these final scores really matter. The pressure builds . . .

For many of our high school juniors and seniors, March Madness is not increasingly dramatic basketball tournaments, it is the reality that they must take their ACT and SAT college entrance exams.

Certainly, their course work over the years has been steadily preparing them to confront this annual “rite of passage,” but many students struggle with how to effectively show their knowledge and abilities under the time constraints of what is becoming an increasingly important test to a number of colleges and universities.

Underlying the demands on college board exams is the need for proficient reading skills. For example, three of the four ACT subtests involve extensive reading tasks. While it is arguable that timed multiple choice exams are not the best method to evaluate a student’s reading strengths, there are some insights that test takers can apply to maximize their performance on reading passages on the ACT and SAT.

The Strategy
Because most Wisconsin students will take the ACT, specific mention of strategies tailored to that test will be outlined below. However, these tactics are also effective for reading sections on the SAT or PSAT.

Step 1: Start students with the premise that although effective overall reading behaviors are necessary to do well on ACT passages, test takers need to adopt a specific reading routine to help them be successful within limited time parameters. Many students mistakenly believe that to do well on an ACT passage, they must read very carefully and try to absorb as much information as they can to answer the questions. In essence, they approach these passages as “micro-readers” who attempt to extract as much as possible in a short period of time from a challenging (and often unmotivating) segment of text. When they become inevitably rushed, they are left with insufficient time to do all four reading passages well, and they may accomplish only a hazy notion of the last passage, with haphazard guessing their only option.

Instead, successful handling of an ACT passage mandates a more mature reading posture. As proficient readers, we rarely read to essentially memorize a message; rather, much of the reading we do is to ascertain the gist of a piece, to locate a few transcendent details, and to make some generalizations or draw a few conclusions. The questions on an ACT encourage this kind of reading, which might be termed “macro-reading,” reading to see the “big picture,” to notice major ideas and determine author intent. Macro-reading requires readers to follow a series of aggressive strategies to get what they need within a short period of time.

Step 2: Next introduce a three-stage protocol for reading ACT reading passages. Because an ACT reading test contains four passages and is allocated 35 minutes for completion, test takers will have slightly less than nine minutes to read a passage and answer the 10 questions. Students should target using their nine minutes to attack an ACT passage in three sweeps:

  • 1st sweep – intelligently “size up” the passage, in about 20 to 30 seconds.
  • 2nd sweep – read at a somewhat faster pace than normal, to obtain a general understanding of the passage.
  • 3rd sweep – revisit specific parts of the passage, as necessary, to clarify answers to questions. The rest of the time, then, is spent bouncing back and forth between select portions of the text and the questions.
  • Step 3: The 1st sweep is an especially critical phase for reading under time pressure. Students will be tempted to jump right in and move line by line through a passage. Instead, they need to be encouraged to take a step back to get an initial “take” or impression of a passage. The rest of this column will focus on this crucial first glimpse of a potentially demanding ACT passage.

Model how to size up an ACT passage by demonstrating the following:

  • Determine which passage you are examining. ACT reading will always feature four types of text: prose literature, social science, science, and humanities. The order these fall on the test may vary.
  • Note the source of the passage. Who is the author and from what larger text was this passage excerpted? Do you know anything about these?
  • Adjust strategy according to type of passage. For the prose segment, quickly scan to locate names of characters and a sense of where and when this story is taking place. For the social science and humanities passages, quickly scan for key words that signal the topic and discipline being discussed. For example, a social science segment may feature a variety of topics within the disciplines of history, political science, economics, psychology, or sociology. Humanities pieces could examine a topic about art, music, theater, architecture, literature, or other aspects of culture. For the science segment, notice whether the topic falls within biological or physical science. Then scan for clues of a cause-effect relationship, of why or how something happens.
  • Quickly skim the opening paragraph, and the first sentences of the subsequent paragraphs, and the concluding paragraph. What does this passage seem to be about? Try to establish a general sense of the focus of this passage.
  • Finally, as you size up the passage, be constantly aware of what you know that might be useful in supporting your understanding of this piece.

Step 4: This systematic preview readies test takers for the 2nd sweep, a somewhat accelerated read of the passage. Next month’s column will detail strategies that help readers dig in when they begin this stage.

Posted March 11, 2002

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