“Ready For A Full Brain Workout?”: 24 Hard ACT-Style Questions To Make You Sweat
🚨Double points alert! 🚨
How hard can it be to get into college nowadays? Tertiary education numbers are growing every year, so is entrance testing getting easier? Or perhaps the average student is way smarter than they were back in the day. Let’s see!
In this ACT-inspired quiz, you’ll face 24 college entry-level questions from the topics of English, math, and science. Most questions require you to analyze information and make educated decisions instead of relying on random facts, so it’s all in your hands!
🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to the Bored Panda Quizzes and explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀
Photo credits: Andy Barbour
•
Not Quite Done Yet!
Discover Your Competitive Edge
Subscribe Premium to Compare Your Stats with Others
More Premium features:
How did you score compared to others?
Your general stats:
| User | Result | Reward |
|---|---|---|
| / 24 | |
| / 24 | |
I don't think #23 is correct. I will say that I've never heard this "present in the action" terminology, but a quick scan through Internet search results implies almost no one else has either. But the one relevant result I found, about the "ACT 2025 Reading Practice Test", seems to present a very similar scenario, including the relating of the character's internal thoughts, and says that it's "third-person narrator not present in the action". Also, FWIW, "Emily" is not a third-person pronoun.
My s***w ups were all the graphs. I didn't understand the questions, let alone be able to figure out the answer. But I've always had a problem figuring out questions or instructions. I build dollhouses and I never read the instructions anymore because they're so complicated (insert Tab B into Slot C so that Part D aligns with Section S). I just look at the pictures and put the things together. Much simpler that way.
Peculiar. On every other article, they define what OP is, which is universal, but they expect us to know what ACT means. Rather thoughtless.
I get your point, but, FWIW, it's one of the two common standardized college entrance exams in the US, the other being the SAT. ("American College Testing" and "Scholastic Aptitude Test")
Load More Replies...I don't think #23 is correct. I will say that I've never heard this "present in the action" terminology, but a quick scan through Internet search results implies almost no one else has either. But the one relevant result I found, about the "ACT 2025 Reading Practice Test", seems to present a very similar scenario, including the relating of the character's internal thoughts, and says that it's "third-person narrator not present in the action". Also, FWIW, "Emily" is not a third-person pronoun.
My s***w ups were all the graphs. I didn't understand the questions, let alone be able to figure out the answer. But I've always had a problem figuring out questions or instructions. I build dollhouses and I never read the instructions anymore because they're so complicated (insert Tab B into Slot C so that Part D aligns with Section S). I just look at the pictures and put the things together. Much simpler that way.
Peculiar. On every other article, they define what OP is, which is universal, but they expect us to know what ACT means. Rather thoughtless.
I get your point, but, FWIW, it's one of the two common standardized college entrance exams in the US, the other being the SAT. ("American College Testing" and "Scholastic Aptitude Test")
Load More Replies...


24
6