In July of this year, ACT's CEO Janet Godwin made a momentous announcement: the ACT is changing. While the SAT has undergone numerous revisions over the past few decades, the ACT has more or less retained its essential form, albeit with the addition of an essay. Even the computer-based version of the exam introduced in 2018 maintains the format and structure of the original paper-based test—it's just on computer instead. There's a pretty good chance that a randomly chosen ACT English question from 20 years ago is still good practice for today's ACT.
All of that is about to change though, and as facts about the upcoming new ACT trickle through the internet, so do rumors. So, fact or fiction? Here's the truth about five common myths surrounding the new ACT.
Fact: The earliest changes to the exam won't roll out until the April 2025 administration in the United States. If you're taking the ACT before that time, you'll be taking the exact same exam that students have come to know and love (or not) in past years, though U.S. test-takers do have the option to take it on paper or computer—an option added earlier this year. For students testing outside of the U.S., nothing is changing until September 2025.
Fact: The new digital ACT will vary significantly from the computer-based exam currently administered both in the U.S. and abroad. The new exam will feature shorter English and Reading passages and will be shorter as a whole—approximately two hours long as compared to the nearly three-hour length of the current exam. The Science section will also become optional and no longer factored into the composite score. We'll know more in the months to come, but what we do know is that the new digital ACT will not be just a computer-based version of your parents' ACT.
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Fact: The rollout of the new ACT is occurring in stages. It's true that in the United States the current computer-based version of the exam will be eliminated in favor of the new format in April of 2025, and that U.S.-based students will still continue to have the option to take the same version of the paper-and-pencil test that exists now. However, ACT has announced that starting in September 2025 it will release a new paper version that mirrors the shorter format and structure of the upcoming new digital ACT. Students will still be able to take the exam using bubble sheets and test booklets, but it won't be the same exam they're taking today.
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Fact: The ACT is scheduled to change markedly in the coming year! U.S.-based students preparing to take the exam on computer in April 2025 should gear up to see a brand new test, and students preparing to take either the paper version of the test or an ACT administered abroad should prepare to see the new version in September 2025. You can read about the changes here.
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Fact: ACT has announced that it's committed to continuing to provide a paper version of the new test for U.S.-based students who prefer not to test on computer—at least, for the foreseeable future. For some years now, students testing abroad have only had the option of testing on computer, and all evidence indicates that will continue to be the case.
So, in a nutshell, what's happening? Here's the timeline for the rollout of the new ACT.
Learn more about how the content of the exam will change here.
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