You Can’t Win a Game You Don’t Understand
Imagine playing chess without knowing how each piece moves.
That’s exactly what happens when Singapore students walk into the ACT examination without fully understanding its pattern. They know it’s important. They’ve studied hard. But they haven’t studied smart.
The ACT isn’t designed to trick you. It’s designed to test specific skills in a specific format within specific time constraints. Once you decode that format, everything changes.
I’ve seen students jump 4–6 points simply by understanding the ACT examination structure and strategies — without learning a single new concept.
This guide gives you the complete pattern breakdown, section by section, with actionable strategies that work specifically for Singapore students.
Quick Overview: What You’ll Learn
- Exact structure of every ACT section
- Question types you’ll encounter in each section
- Time allocation strategies that prevent rushing
- Difficulty distribution within sections
- Section-wise strategies used by top scorers
- Common traps the ACT sets and how to avoid them
- Real student example showing strategy in action
- Pro tips from experienced tutors
The ACT Examination at a Glance
Before we dive deep, here’s the big picture.
| Section | Questions | Time | Time Per Question | Order |
| English | 75 | 45 min | 36 seconds | 1st |
| Math | 60 | 60 min | 60 seconds | 2nd |
| Reading | 40 | 35 min | 52 seconds | 3rd |
| Break | — | 10 min | — | — |
| Science | 40 | 35 min | 52 seconds | 4th |
| Writing (optional) | 1 essay | 40 min | — | 5th |
Total test time: 2 hours 55 minutes (without Writing) or 3 hours 35 minutes (with Writing)
Key observation: The ACT examination is a speed test. You have less than a minute per question on average. Strategy isn’t optional — it’s essential.
Section 1: English (75 Questions | 45 Minutes)
What It Tests
- Grammar and punctuation rules
- Sentence structure
- Writing style and rhetoric
- Organization and logical flow
The Pattern
You’ll read 5 passages. Each passage has 15 questions embedded within it. Underlined portions of the text correspond to questions below.
Questions fall into two broad categories:
| Category | Focus | % of Questions |
| Conventions of Standard English | Grammar, punctuation, sentence structure | ~51% |
| Production of Writing | Organization, style, purpose, strategy | ~29% |
| Knowledge of Language | Word choice, tone, conciseness | ~20% |
Question Types You’ll See
- Fix the error: A sentence is underlined. Choose the correct version.
- Best placement: Where should this sentence go in the paragraph?
- Purpose questions: What is the writer trying to achieve?
- Delete or keep: Should this sentence be removed?
- Transition words: Which word best connects these ideas?
Strategy for Singapore Students
Most Singapore students already know enough grammar. The issue is applying it under time pressure.
Here’s what works:
- ✅ Read the full sentence before looking at answer choices. Context matters.
- ✅ “NO CHANGE” is correct about 25% of the time. Don’t assume something is always wrong.
- ✅ Shorter answers are often correct. The ACT values conciseness. When in doubt, choose the most direct option.
- ✅ Spend no more than 30 seconds per question. If stuck, eliminate two choices and guess.
- ✅ Practice the top 15 grammar rules. They cover about 80% of English questions.
The 15 Grammar Rules That Matter Most
- Comma splices
- Subject-verb agreement
- Pronoun-antecedent agreement
- Misplaced modifiers
- Parallel structure
- Apostrophe usage
- Semicolon rules
- Colon usage
- Redundancy
- Wordiness
- Verb tense consistency
- Who vs. whom
- Than vs. then
- Its vs. it’s
- Run-on sentences
Master these and you’ll handle the majority of English questions confidently.
Section 2: Math (60 Questions | 60 Minutes)
What It Tests
- Pre-algebra and elementary algebra
- Intermediate algebra
- Coordinate geometry
- Plane geometry
- Trigonometry
The Pattern
Unlike English, Math questions are standalone — no passages. They progress from easier to harder.
| Question Range | Difficulty | Content Focus |
| Q1–20 | Easy | Pre-algebra, basic algebra |
| Q21–40 | Medium | Intermediate algebra, coordinate geometry |
| Q41–60 | Hard | Plane geometry, trigonometry, complex problems |
Content Breakdown
| Topic | Approximate % of Questions |
| Preparing for Higher Math | ~60% |
| Integrating Essential Skills | ~25% |
| Modeling | ~15% |
Strategy for Singapore Students
Good news — Math is where Singapore students typically shine. Your curriculum is rigorous, and ACT math rarely goes beyond what you’ve already learned.
The challenge is speed and silly mistakes.
- ✅ Don’t spend more than 60 seconds on any question. Mark difficult ones and return later.
- ✅ Use your calculator wisely. It’s allowed for all questions, but mental math is faster for simple calculations.
- ✅ Watch for trick answers. The ACT loves placing partially correct answers. Read the question twice.
- ✅ Back-solve when possible. Plug answer choices into the equation instead of solving from scratch.
- ✅ Know your formulas. The ACT does NOT provide a formula sheet. Memorize key geometry and trig formulas.
Must-Know Formulas
- Area of triangle, rectangle, circle, trapezoid
- Pythagorean theorem
- Slope formula
- Distance formula
- Midpoint formula
- Quadratic formula
- SOH CAH TOA (basic trigonometry)
- Special right triangles (30-60-90, 45-45-90)
- Circle equation: (x-h)² + (y-k)² = r²
Singapore students: You likely know all of these. The key is speed of recall under pressure.
Section 3: Reading (40 Questions | 35 Minutes)
What It Tests
- Comprehension of complex texts
- Ability to draw inferences
- Understanding of author’s purpose and tone
- Analysis of arguments and evidence
The Pattern
You’ll read 4 passages (sometimes 3 passages + 1 paired passage set). Each passage has 10 questions.
The passages always appear in this order:
| Passage | Type | Typical Content |
| Passage 1 | Prose Fiction / Literary Narrative | Novel excerpt, short story |
| Passage 2 | Social Science | Psychology, sociology, economics |
| Passage 3 | Humanities | Art, music, philosophy, memoir |
| Passage 4 | Natural Science | Biology, chemistry, physics |
Question Types
- Main idea: What is the primary purpose of this passage?
- Detail: According to the passage, what is…?
- Inference: It can reasonably be inferred that…
- Vocabulary in context: As used in line X, the word “Y” most nearly means…
- Author’s purpose: The author includes this detail in order to…
- Comparative: (For paired passages) How do the two authors differ?
Strategy for Singapore Students
Reading is the most time-pressured section of the entire ACT examination. Many Singapore students struggle here — not because they can’t read, but because they read too carefully.
- ✅ Don’t read every word. Skim for main ideas and paragraph purposes in 3 minutes. Spend 5–6 minutes on questions.
- ✅ Read the questions first (optional strategy). Some students perform better knowing what to look for before reading.
- ✅ The answer is ALWAYS in the passage. Never bring outside knowledge. If you can’t point to evidence in the text, your answer is likely wrong.
- ✅ Start with your strongest passage type. If you love science, start with Passage 4. You don’t have to go in order.
- ✅ Eliminate extreme answers. The ACT rarely rewards extreme interpretations. The correct answer is usually moderate and well-supported.
Timing Strategy
| Activity | Time Allowed |
| Read passage | 3 minutes |
| Answer 10 questions | 5–6 minutes |
| Total per passage | 8–9 minutes |
| Buffer time | 2–3 minutes |
If you’re running out of time, skip the Prose Fiction passage (it’s often the trickiest for Singapore students) and focus on Social Science and Natural Science — they tend to be more straightforward.
Section 4: Science (40 Questions | 35 Minutes)
What It Tests
Here’s what surprises most students and parents.
The Science section does NOT test science knowledge.
It tests your ability to:
- Read and interpret graphs, tables, and charts
- Understand experimental design
- Evaluate conflicting scientific viewpoints
- Draw conclusions from data
The Pattern
You’ll encounter 6–7 passages. Each passage presents data and is followed by 5–7 questions.
There are three passage types:
| Type | What It Looks Like | Number of Passages |
| Data Representation | Charts, graphs, tables | 2–3 |
| Research Summaries | Descriptions of experiments | 2–3 |
| Conflicting Viewpoints | Two scientists disagree | 1 |
Question Types
- Read the graph: What value does Variable X have at Point Y?
- Trend identification: As temperature increases, what happens to pressure?
- Experimental design: Why did the scientists use a control group?
- Prediction: Based on the data, what would happen if…?
- Conflicting viewpoints: On which point do Scientists 1 and 2 agree?
Strategy for Singapore Students
Singapore students often over-prepare for this section by studying biology, chemistry, and physics content. Don’t do this.
- ✅ Treat it like Reading Comprehension with data. Read the passage quickly, then focus on the visuals.
- ✅ Go to the questions first. Many questions can be answered just by looking at the graphs — you don’t always need to read the passage text.
- ✅ Spend extra time on Conflicting Viewpoints. This passage type requires careful reading and is worth more questions.
- ✅ Practice speed with real ACT Science passages. This section rewards familiarity with the format more than any other.
- ✅ Don’t get intimidated by unfamiliar topics. You might see passages about astrophysics or genetics. The topic doesn’t matter — the data does.
Timing Strategy
| Passage Type | Suggested Time |
| Data Representation | 4 minutes each |
| Research Summaries | 5 minutes each |
| Conflicting Viewpoints | 6–7 minutes |
| Buffer | 1–2 minutes |
Section 5: Writing / Essay (Optional | 40 Minutes)
The Pattern
- You receive one prompt presenting an issue and three perspectives
- You must develop your own perspective and analyze how it relates to the given ones
- Scored separately on a scale of 2–12
- Does NOT affect your composite score
What Graders Look For
| Domain | What They Evaluate |
| Ideas and Analysis | Depth of your argument |
| Development and Support | Quality of evidence and reasoning |
| Organization | Logical structure and flow |
| Language Use | Grammar, vocabulary, sentence variety |
Strategy
- ✅ Spend 5 minutes planning before writing
- ✅ Take a clear position — don’t sit on the fence
- ✅ Address at least two of the three given perspectives
- ✅ Use specific examples (real-world, historical, personal)
- ✅ Write 4–5 paragraphs minimum
- ✅ Save 3 minutes to proofread
Real Student Scenario: Strategy Beats Raw Talent
Meet Aditya — a JC1 student in Singapore.
Aditya was academically strong but scored 28 on his first ACT attempt. His section scores revealed the problem.
| Section | Score | Issue |
| English | 30 | Missed rhetoric questions |
| Math | 33 | Ran out of time on last 8 questions |
| Reading | 24 | Couldn’t finish 2 passages |
| Science | 26 | Spent too long reading passage text |
His problem wasn’t knowledge — it was strategy.
Working with tutors at Test Prep with The Princeton Review Singapore, Aditya spent 10 weeks on:
- Reading pacing drills (4 passages in 35 minutes)
- Science graph-first approach (skip passage text initially)
- Math back-solving techniques for hard questions
- English rhetoric question patterns
Second attempt results:
| Section | Score | Improvement |
| English | 33 | +3 |
| Math | 35 | +2 |
| Reading | 31 | +7 |
| Science | 32 | +6 |
| Composite | 33 | +5 |
A 5-point jump — entirely from learning the ACT examination pattern and applying the right strategies.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Mistake 1: Spending Equal Time on Every Question
Not all questions are created equal. Easy questions and hard questions are worth the same points. Get the easy ones right first.
❌ Mistake 2: Reading Science Passages Word by Word
Go to the data first. Read the text only when questions require it.
❌ Mistake 3: Not Practicing Under Timed Conditions
Untimed practice creates a false sense of readiness. Always practice with a timer.
❌ Mistake 4: Ignoring the English Section
Singapore students often dismiss English as “easy” and don’t prep for it. Yet it’s where the ACT examination tests nuanced grammar and style rules that differ from everyday English.
❌ Mistake 5: Changing Answers Without Good Reason
Research shows your first instinct is usually correct. Only change an answer if you find clear evidence it’s wrong.
Tutor Pro Tips: Section-Wise Hacks
🎯 English Pro Tip
When two answer choices are grammatically correct, choose the shorter one. The ACT rewards concise writing almost every time.
🎯 Math Pro Tip
For the last 10 questions, try plugging in answer choices before solving algebraically. It’s faster and avoids calculation errors.
🎯 Reading Pro Tip
Always read the first and last sentences of each paragraph carefully. They contain the main ideas that 70% of questions are based on.
🎯 Science Pro Tip
Cover the passage text with your hand. Look only at the graphs and tables. Answer as many questions as you can this way. Then read the text for the remaining questions.
🎯 General Pro Tip
Take 6–8 full-length practice tests before your real exam. Not for content — for endurance. The ACT is a mental marathon, and stamina matters.
FAQs: ACT Examination Pattern
Q: Does the ACT question order change between test dates?
The section order is always the same: English → Math → Reading → Science → Writing. However, the specific questions change every test.
Q: Are some test dates harder than others?
The difficulty is equated across test dates through a statistical process called equating. So no test date is objectively easier or harder than another.
Q: Can I skip sections I’m not good at?
No. You must complete all four mandatory sections. However, you can strategically manage time within each section.
Q: Is the ACT examination the same worldwide?
The format and scoring are identical worldwide. However, international test forms may differ from US domestic forms. The difficulty level remains equivalent.
Q: Should I guess on questions I don’t know?
Absolutely. There is no penalty for wrong answers. Always fill in every bubble, even if it’s a random guess.
Q: How is the ACT different from the SAT in structure?
The ACT has 4 sections (including Science) with more questions and tighter timing. The SAT has 2 sections with fewer questions and slightly more time per question. Neither is inherently harder — they test differently.
Final Thoughts: Know the Pattern, Own the Score
Here’s the truth about the ACT examination.
Content knowledge gets you started. Pattern mastery gets you the score.
Every question type is predictable. Every section follows a structure. Every timing constraint can be managed with practice. The students who score highest aren’t just the smartest — they’re the most prepared for the format.
You’ve now seen every section broken down. You know the question types, the timing, the traps, and the strategies. The next step is putting this into practice.
Start with one section. Master its pattern. Move to the next.
The ACT doesn’t reward perfection. It rewards preparation. And now, you’re more prepared than 90% of students who walk into that exam room.

