How Singapore Students Can Start Their ACT Preparation in Grade 10 or 11
The Student Who Started Early Won the Scholarship
Two students from the same JC. Same predicted A-Level grades. Same target universities.
Student A started ACT preparation in Grade 12, three months before applications.
Student B started in Grade 11, eighteen months before applications.
Same intelligence. Same school. Completely different outcomes.
Student A scored 28. Decent, but not scholarship territory.
Student B scored 34. Full merit scholarship worth USD 120,000.
The difference wasn't talent.
It was timing.
Starting your ACT preparation in Grade 10 or 11 is one of the smartest decisions a Singapore student can make for US college applications. This guide tells you exactly how to do it — without burning out or sacrificing your school grades.
Quick Overview: What You'll Learn
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Why starting early in Grade 10 or 11 gives massive advantage
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How to balance ACT prep with Singapore school curriculum
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Month-by-month preparation roadmap
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What to focus on in each grade level
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How Singapore curriculum already helps your ACT prep
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Common mistakes early starters make
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Resources and tools for early preparation
Why Starting in Grade 10 or 11 Changes Everything
The Numbers Tell the Story
Students who start ACT prep in Grade 10-11:
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Average improvement: 5-8 points from baseline
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Average attempts needed: 1-2
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Grade 12 stress level: Significantly lower
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Scholarship eligibility: Substantially higher
Students who start in Grade 12:
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Average improvement: 2-4 points from baseline
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Average attempts needed: 2-3
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Grade 12 stress level: Extremely high
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Scholarship eligibility: Limited by rushed scores
The math is simple:
More time = more improvement = better scores = more opportunities.
For students also considering other study destinations beyond the US, building strong standardized test skills early pays dividends. Students exploring options to study & Admission in Australia for Singapore students will also find that early academic preparation strengthens overall university applications globally.
The Singapore Curriculum Advantage
Here's something most Singapore students don't realize:
Your Singapore school curriculum already teaches 70-80% of ACT content.
O-Level/IP Math → ACT Math
Singapore's math curriculum goes deeper than ACT Math requirements. If you're doing O-Level Additional Math, you already know most ACT Math content.
O-Level English → ACT English
English grammar, composition, and comprehension from O-Levels directly maps to ACT English and Reading sections.
O-Level Sciences → ACT Science
Data interpretation, graph reading, and experimental analysis from Singapore science subjects prepares you well for ACT Science.
Starting early means:
You can build ACT skills on top of your school learning — not separate from it.
Understanding What Grade Level You're In
Grade 10 (Secondary 4 / IP Year 4)
Your situation:
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O-Level year (if mainstream)
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IP Year 4 (if integrated programme)
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Age: Approximately 15-16 years old
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School load: Heavy (O-Level exam year)
ACT preparation intensity: Light to moderate
Primary goal: Familiarization and foundation building
Expected ACT baseline: 20-24 (diagnostic)
Target improvement by Grade 11: 4-6 points
Grade 11 (JC Year 1 / IP Year 5 / IB Year 1)
Your situation:
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Starting A-Levels or IB
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New academic environment
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Age: Approximately 16-17 years old
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School load: Very heavy (A-Level foundation year)
ACT preparation intensity: Moderate
Primary goal: Serious skill building and first official attempt
Expected ACT baseline: 23-27 (after Grade 10 prep)
Target by end of Grade 11: 28-32
Why This Timeline Works for Singapore
The JC/IB system creates a natural window:
JC Year 1 (Grade 11) is challenging but doesn't have final exams until Year 2.
This creates a strategic opportunity: Build ACT skills during Year 1 when the pressure is building but hasn't peaked.
By Year 2 (A-Level exam year), your ACT is already done. You focus entirely on A-Levels.
This is the Singapore ACT sweet spot.
The Grade 10 Preparation Plan
What to Do in Grade 10 (Secondary 4 / IP Year 4)
Overall approach:
Don't study for the ACT directly. Build foundational skills that feed into ACT preparation.
This is smart because:
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You're preparing for O-Levels simultaneously
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Foundational skills serve both exams
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No burnout from dual preparation
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Natural skill building without pressure
Grade 10 Monthly Roadmap
January - March: Research and Orientation
During this period, focus on understanding, not studying.
Actions to take:
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Download free "Preparing for the ACT" guide from ACT.org
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Take one untimed diagnostic section (try English first)
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Research 10-15 US universities you're interested in
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Understand ACT score requirements for target schools
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Learn what sections and question types exist
Time commitment: 1-2 hours per week maximum
Goal: Know what the ACT is and where you currently stand.
April - June: O-Level Prep Doubles as ACT Prep
This is the genius of starting early.
O-Level subjects that directly build ACT skills:
English Language O-Level → ACT English and Reading
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Grammar rules you're learning apply directly
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Comprehension passages mirror ACT Reading
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Essay writing builds Writing section skills
Additional Mathematics O-Level → ACT Math
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Algebra, functions, trigonometry all appear on ACT
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Problem-solving approach is the same
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No extra ACT Math study needed during this period
Sciences O-Level → ACT Science
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Data interpretation from chemistry/biology practicals
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Graph reading from physics labs
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Experimental design questions parallel O-Level science
Actions to take:
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Study O-Levels as your primary focus
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Keep ACT awareness in mind during school study
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When reading comprehension passages for O-Level, practice the ACT technique of reading for main idea
Time commitment: 0 additional hours (O-Level study IS ACT prep)
July - August: Introduction to ACT-Specific Content
O-Levels are done (or nearly done). You have more time.
Actions to take:
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Take one full timed ACT practice test (official test recommended)
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Score it honestly — this is your real baseline
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Identify your two weakest sections
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Buy one good ACT prep book (Princeton Review or Barron's)
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Read strategy chapters for weakest sections
Recommended first practice test:
ACT Official Guide (available at most Singapore bookshops or online)
Time commitment: 3-4 hours per week
Goal: Establish accurate baseline score. Identify specific weaknesses.
September - December: Targeted Foundation Building
This period sets you up for serious Grade 11 preparation.
Actions to take:
For Math:
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Review any O-Level math topics you found weak
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Learn coordinate geometry if not covered in school yet
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Practice 15-20 ACT Math questions per week
For English:
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Learn ACT-specific grammar rules (punctuation, sentence structure)
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Practice passage-based questions
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Time yourself on practice passages
For Reading:
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Read one English article daily (Straits Times, The Economist)
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Practice identifying main ideas and author's purpose
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Build reading speed gradually
For Science:
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Practice reading graphs and charts quickly
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Work through 2-3 data representation passages per week
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Don't study science facts — practice data interpretation
Time commitment: 3-5 hours per week
Year-end goal:
Diagnostic score: 24-26 (up from initial baseline of 20-24)
The Grade 11 Preparation Plan
Why Grade 11 Is Your Most Important Year
Grade 11 is where ACT preparation becomes serious.
This is the year you:
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Build significant score improvement
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Take your first official ACT attempt
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Potentially achieve your target score
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Leave Grade 12 free for applications and A-Levels
The Grade 11 ACT mission:
Score 29-33 by the end of the year.
Grade 11 Monthly Roadmap
January - February: Structured Study Begins
Actions to take:
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Create formal study schedule (more on this below)
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Take full practice test to establish new baseline
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Identify top 3 weaknesses across all sections
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Set specific score target for first official attempt
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Consider enrolling in structured prep program
What structured prep looks like:
Self-study option:
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5-6 hours per week dedicated to ACT
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Official ACT practice tests as primary material
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Strategy guides for each section
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Weekly progress tracking
Tutoring option:
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2-hour sessions twice per week
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Personalized attention to weak areas
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Accountability and structure
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Faster improvement timeline
Prep course option:
Comprehensive programs at established test prep centers in Singapore cover all sections systematically with expert instruction.
Time commitment: 5-7 hours per week
March - April: First Major Push
This is when preparation becomes intensive.
Section-specific focus:
English section (aim for 28-32):
Weekly practice:
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2 complete English passages timed (15 questions each in 9 minutes)
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Review every error — understand WHY it's wrong
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Focus on punctuation, transitions, and sentence structure
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Master ACT-specific grammar rules:
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Oxford comma usage
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Semicolon rules
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Subject-verb agreement
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Pronoun agreement
Math section (aim for 30-36):
Singapore students typically excel here.
Weekly practice:
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30 Math questions timed
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Focus on question types you haven't seen
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Pre-Algebra and Elementary Algebra (questions 1-20)
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Intermediate Algebra and Coordinate Geometry (questions 21-40)
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Plane Geometry and Trigonometry (questions 41-60)
Common Singapore student Math gaps:
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Matrices (not in Singapore curriculum until A-Levels)
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Logarithms (verify you know ACT-level coverage)
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Trigonometric identities
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Complex numbers
Reading section (aim for 25-30):
This needs the most work for most Singapore students.
Weekly practice:
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Complete 2 full Reading passages timed (8 minutes 45 seconds each)
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Practice passage types:
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Literary Narrative (often hardest for Singapore students)
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Social Science
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Humanities
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Natural Science (often easiest)
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Read widely: novels, essays, historical articles
Building reading speed:
Week 1-2: Read passage in 5 minutes, answer questions
Week 3-4: Read passage in 4 minutes, answer questions
Week 5-6: Read passage in 3 minutes, answer questions
Target: 3-minute passage read + 5-6 minutes for questions
Science section (aim for 27-32):
Weekly practice:
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Complete 2 full Science passages timed
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Focus on data representation (fastest question type)
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Practice conflicting viewpoints passage strategy
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Remember: It's data interpretation, not science knowledge
Time commitment: 6-8 hours per week
May - June: First Official ACT Attempt
Target test date: April or June ACT
Why take it now:
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You have 6+ months of preparation
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Results give you clear picture of where you stand
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Time for retake in Grade 11 if needed
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Removes major uncertainty
Two weeks before test:
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Reduce preparation intensity
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Focus on strategy review, not new learning
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Take one final full practice test
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Review your error patterns
One week before test:
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Light review only
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Physical preparation (sleep, exercise)
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Test center logistics confirmed
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Mental preparation strategies
Expected score at this point: 26-30
July - August: Review and Targeted Improvement
After receiving your first official scores (2-3 weeks after test):
Analyzing your score report:
Your ACT score report shows:
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Overall composite score
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Section scores (1-36 each)
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Subscore breakdowns
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National percentile rankings
How to use this data:
Identify which subscore areas are weakest:
English subscores:
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Conventions of Standard English
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Production of Writing
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Knowledge of Language
Math subscores:
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Preparing for Higher Math
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Integrating Essential Skills
Reading subscores:
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Key Ideas and Details
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Craft and Structure
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Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
Science subscores:
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Interpretation of Data
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Scientific Investigation
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Evaluation of Models
Target your weakest subscores specifically.
This is more effective than general review.
Time commitment: 5-6 hours per week
September - October: Second Official ACT Attempt
Target test date: September or October ACT
This is your primary attempt.
You've had months to improve from first score.
Expected improvement from first attempt: 2-5 points
What's different this time:
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You know exactly what the test feels like
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You've addressed specific weak areas
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Your timing strategies are refined
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Test anxiety is significantly reduced
Realistic targets:
|
Starting Baseline |
After Grade 10 Prep |
After First Attempt |
Target Second Attempt |
|
20-22 |
23-25 |
26-28 |
29-31 |
|
23-25 |
26-28 |
28-30 |
31-33 |
|
26-28 |
28-30 |
30-32 |
33-35 |
Time commitment: 6-8 hours per week in 4 weeks before test, then taper
November - December: Consolidation
After your second official ACT attempt:
Scenario A: You achieved your target score
Congratulations. ACT preparation is essentially complete.
What to do:
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Send scores to target universities
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Shift focus entirely to A-Level preparation
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Begin university application essays
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Research scholarship applications
Scenario B: You're 1-2 points below target
Consider one more attempt in Grade 12 (September or October).
What to do:
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Identify remaining weaknesses from score report
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Maintain preparation during Grade 12 holidays
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Plan September Grade 12 attempt
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Don't let ACT distract from A-Level work
Scenario C: You're significantly below target
Reassess your strategy and target universities.
What to do:
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Evaluate whether more prep is beneficial
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Consider adjusting university list
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Consult with college counselor about options
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Focus on strengthening other application elements
Balancing ACT Prep with Singapore School
The Most Common Concern
"I'm already overwhelmed with school. How do I add ACT prep?"
This is the most valid concern Singapore students have about starting early.
Here's the honest answer: You don't add ACT prep. You integrate it.
Integration Strategies by Subject
During Math class:
When solving equations in school, practice the ACT approach:
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Work efficiently, not just correctly
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Estimate before calculating
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Check answer makes sense before moving on
This doesn't add time — it changes HOW you study the same material.
During English class:
When writing essays for school:
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Pay attention to transitions (big ACT topic)
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Notice grammatical structures your teacher corrects
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Practice clarity in writing (valued by both A-Levels and ACT)
During science classes:
When reading lab reports or textbook data:
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Practice extracting conclusions quickly
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Notice what the graphs actually show
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Don't memorize data — practice interpreting it
Weekly Time Budget: Grade 11
Sample Week for JC Year 1 Student
|
Day |
School Work |
ACT Prep |
Total Study |
|
Monday |
3 hours |
45 min (English) |
3h 45min |
|
Tuesday |
3 hours |
0 |
3 hours |
|
Wednesday |
3 hours |
45 min (Math) |
3h 45min |
|
Thursday |
3 hours |
0 |
3 hours |
|
Friday |
2 hours |
45 min (Reading) |
2h 45min |
|
Saturday |
2 hours |
2 hours (full section) |
4 hours |
|
Sunday |
1 hour |
0 |
1 hour |
|
Total |
17 hours |
5 hours |
22 hours |
This is manageable.
The key is consistency over intensity.
5 dedicated hours per week for 40 weeks = 200 hours of ACT preparation.
Research shows 150-200 hours of quality preparation produces 6-8 point improvements.
When School Exams Conflict
During J1 Promotional Exams (October-November):
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Reduce ACT prep to 1-2 hours per week
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Focus entirely on school exams
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Resume full ACT prep after exams
School always comes first.
A-Level results matter as much as ACT scores for US admissions. Don't sacrifice one for the other.
Case Study: How Wei Xuan Did It
Background
Wei Xuan attended Hwa Chong Institution on the IP (Integrated Programme) track.
Started ACT preparation in IP Year 4 (Grade 10) at age 15.
His situation:
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Predicted strong IP results
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Target universities: MIT, CMU, University of Michigan
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Family budget: Needed significant scholarship
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Challenge: Extremely heavy school workload
His Grade 10 Plan
January-June:
Focused entirely on school. Spent 30 minutes per week reading ACT format information.
July-August (IP holiday period):
Took diagnostic practice test. Scored 24.
Identified weaknesses: Reading (21) and Science (22).
Spent holiday doing 2 hours daily on Reading and Science strategies.
September-December:
3 hours per week maintaining momentum while school resumed.
Year-end baseline: 27
His Grade 11 Plan
January-April:
5 hours per week structured preparation.
Enrolled in weekend ACT course for 8 weeks.
April attempt:
Scored 30. Good progress. Not yet at target.
May-August:
6 hours per week. Focused entirely on Reading (biggest gap).
Used summer holiday for intensive 3-week preparation push.
September attempt:
Scored 33. Achieved target.
October onwards:
Shifted focus to university applications and IP Year 5 academics.
His Results
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ACT: 33 composite (English: 34, Math: 36, Reading: 31, Science: 32)
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Applied ED to Carnegie Mellon Computer Science
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Admitted with $15,000/year merit scholarship
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Total scholarship value: USD 60,000
The key: Starting early meant he had time to improve Reading from 21 to 31 — a 10-point improvement over 18 months of consistent work.
That improvement in one section changed his entire college outcome.
Resources for Early Starters
Official Resources (Free)
ACT.org:
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Free official practice tests (download PDF)
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"Preparing for the ACT" guide
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Sample questions by section
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Online practice platform
Khan Academy:
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Free SAT prep (much of which applies to ACT Math)
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Grammar and writing lessons
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Reading comprehension strategies
Recommended Books
Overall ACT prep:
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"The Princeton Review Cracking the ACT" (updated annually)
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"Barron's ACT" (comprehensive coverage)
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"ACT Official Guide" (real practice tests — most important)
Section-specific:
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"ACT Math Prep" by Kaplan (if Math needs work)
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"Reading ACT" practice books (for targeted Reading improvement)
Digital Resources
Apps:
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ACT Academy (official app)
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Magoosh ACT (structured lessons)
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PrepFactory (adaptive practice)
Websites:
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CrackACT.com (free practice tests)
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ACTstudent.org (official resources)
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Number2.com (free online practice)
Pro Tips from Experienced Tutors
Tip 1: The Diagnostic Is Sacred
Your first timed diagnostic practice test is the most important test you'll take.
Don't study before it. Don't prepare. Just take it cold.
This gives you an honest baseline from which to measure real improvement.
Cheating on your diagnostic by looking up answers or taking breaks only hurts your own preparation.
Tip 2: Quality Over Quantity
5 focused hours per week beats 15 distracted hours.
Focused practice means:
-
Phone in another room
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Timer running
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Review every single error
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Understand WHY each wrong answer is wrong
Tip 3: Review Matters More Than Practice
Many students do practice questions but never review errors.
This is like running the same broken route over and over.
Spend equal time reviewing as practicing:
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30 minutes practice → 30 minutes review
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Understand every error conceptually
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Rework the question from scratch (not just read the explanation)
Tip 4: Official Tests First
Always prioritize official ACT practice tests (from ACT.org or the Official Guide).
Third-party practice questions are useful supplements, but official tests most accurately represent real test difficulty.
Use official tests for:
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Full timed practice tests
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Baseline measurements
Use third-party resources for:
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Targeted skill building
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Extra question volume
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Concept learning
Tip 5: Track Everything
Keep a preparation journal with:
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Practice test dates and scores
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Section scores for each test
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Question types you got wrong
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Concepts you need to review
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Time remaining at end of each section
Data makes your preparation smarter, not just harder.
Common Mistakes Early Starters Make
Mistake 1: Burning Out in Grade 10
The problem:
Student starts too intensively in Grade 10. 15 hours per week of ACT prep alongside O-Levels.
Burns out completely by Grade 11. Gives up on ACT preparation entirely.
The fix:
Grade 10 is for foundation and familiarity only. Maximum 3-5 hours per week.
Mistake 2: Ignoring School Grades
The problem:
Student focuses so heavily on ACT that A-Level predictions suffer.
US universities see both ACT scores AND predicted grades. A great ACT with poor predicted grades raises red fl



