... group– ACT SCIENCE REASONING TEST PRACTICE –264Overview: About the ACTScience Reasoning Test The most important thing you should know about this test is that it is not a science test, but ... similar.■Think of a quick summary for a passage or for data.■ Practice, and practice, and practice some more.– ACT SCIENCE REASONING TEST PRACTICE –282DATAREPRESENTATIONGraphics are a concise and organized ... meat.– ACT SCIENCE REASONING TEST PRACTICE –279■pace yourself.■ignore all distractions.■spot-check your answers.For Multiple-Choice Questions When answering multiple-choice questions, ...
... 1991).Websiteswww .act. org— The official ACT site.www.testprep.compracticehdr.shtml—Provides practice tests for the ACT exam.www.powerprep.com—Provides strategies, tutoring, software, diagnostic and online practice ... from the nucleation centers.– ACTSCIENCE REASONING TESTPRACTICE 306Getting into the ACT: Official Guide to the ACT Assessment (New York: HBJ, 1997).Kaplan ACT 2000 with CD-ROM (New York: ... opposite poles of the cell.Spontaneous reaction—A reaction that does not require an external source of energy to proceed.– ACTSCIENCE REASONING TESTPRACTICE 32564. h. Choices h and j are tough,...
... as good to themongooses.–GED SCIENCEPRACTICE QUESTIONS –272DirectionsRead the questions carefully and choose the best answer for each question. Some questions may refer to a passage,illustration, ... write in the test booklet. Make any notes or calculations on a sep-arate piece of paper.CHAPTERGED Science Practice Questions NOW IT’S time to put all that you have learned about science andscientific ... 28FSHLHProgesteroneHormone concentration (units per ml)Day of menstrual cycle–GED SCIENCEPRACTICE QUESTIONS –2831. In an acid base reaction, an acid reacts with abase to produce water and a salt. The pH scalecan...
... end of Practice Reading Test One.Now continue with Practice Writing Test One on page 104.103 Practice Test Two PRACTICE TEST TWO PRACTICE LISTENING TEST TWOThis is a practice listening test ... of Practice Writing Test One.Now continue with Practice Speaking Test One on page 105.104 Practice Test TwoReading Passage 3 Questions 29 - 40You are advised to spend about 20 minutes on Questions ... of Practice Reading Test Two.Now continue with Practice Writing Test Two on page 125.124 Practice Test TwoReading Passage 2 Questions 16-28You are advised to spend about 20 minutes on Questions...
... GED SCIENCEPRACTICEQUESTIONS 28516. a. Every human normally inherits 23 chromo-somes from the mother and 23 chromosomesfrom the father. However, that doesn’t mean thathumans look exactly ... dig-its on each hand and foot, binocular vision, andflexible shoulder joints.– GED SCIENCEPRACTICEQUESTIONS 287acter rides into town in a convertible), you need to con-sider why the author has ... planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,and Neptune.– GED SCIENCEPRACTICEQUESTIONS 292These signal words usually mean that a supportingfact or idea will follow. If you are having trouble findingthe...
... passage, the first practical transformer was developed in:A. 1820.B. 1831.C. 1881.D. 1900. ACT PracticeTest 4READINGPassage XIIIHUMANITIES: The following passage isexcerpted from A Short History ... molecules. To detect biologicalactivity, Martian soil samples were treatedwith various nutrients that would producecharacteristic by-products if life forms were [30]active in the soil. The results ... and boulders. The view resemblednothing so much as a flat section of desert—in fact, the winning entry in a contest atJ.P.L. for the photograph most accurately [15]predicting what Mars would...
... theirmother tongue from a foreign language,sucking more vigorously when they hear it [15] ACT PracticeTest 1READINGPassage IPROSE FICTION: This passage is an adaptedexcerpt from Willa Cather’s ... originalutterances.But recent studies suggest there is [90]much more to the story—that childrenactively seek out abstract grammaticalrules. In one clever experiment, researchersled by New York University ... deciding upon a course ofaction.H. doing as she pleases without permission from her father or governess.J. abiding by strict rules governing her behavior.Passage IIISOCIAL SCIENCE: The following...
... included the jaguar stories of threeranchers (lines 34-67) in order to: ACT PracticeTest 2READINGPassage VSOCIAL SCIENCE: The following passage isexcerpted from a popular journal of archeology.About ... performance.To test this hunch, Steele and Aronson gave44 Stanford undergrads questions from theverbal part of the tough Graduate RecordExam. One group was asked, right before [70]the test, to ... anonymi-ty, the greatest names, such as Leonardo daVinci, Hans Holbein, Albrecht Durer, and [75]Benvenuto Cellini, were found quite matter-of-factly among those of designers andmanufacturers of arms....
... pho-tography and that they have made theirgreatest contribution in this field. One rea-son for this is not difficult to ascertain. As [5] ACT PracticeTest 3READINGPassage IXHUMANITIES: The passage ... the mother of six children, sheadopted several more and still found time tobe active in social causes and literary activi- [25]ties. After the Camerons settled in Englandin 1848 at Freshwater ... numerous activities andtaking care of her large family, Mrs.Cameron might have been remembered asstill another rather remarkable and colorful [35]Victorian lady had it not been for the factthat,...
... At one time it was common practice for abalone fishermen to chop starfish intopieces and throw them back into the ocean. What wasthe most probable result of this practice? F. The starfish population ... wouldyield the most useful data concerning the reactionconditions that favor each product?A. Varying the concentration of the solutionsB. Testing with pH levels of 7.0C. Heating the solutions ... suggested that Product B may react to form other,more readily dissolved compounds in the presence ofcertain ions. Such a hypothesis is best supported by thefact that:F. Product A forms at...
... 1Surface earthquakes occur when rock in the Earth’scrust fractures to relieve stress. However, below 50 km,rock is under too much pressure to fracture normally.Deep-focus earthquakes are caused by ... phase change is thought to occur at400 km, and indeed, earthquake activity at this level isnegligible. Between 400 and 680 km, activity once againincreases. Although seismologists initially believed ... Deep-earthquake activity does not occur below 400km.B. Fluid allows tectonic plates to slip past oneanother.C. Water can penetrate mantle rock.D. Rock below 50 km will not fracture normally.8....