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    <title>Chad Cargill's ACT Test Prep - Episodes Tagged with “Time”</title>
    <link>https://podcast.chadcargill.com/tags/time</link>
    <pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2021 02:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
    <description>Chad Cargill took the ACT test 18 times in high school raising his score 13 points and scoring in the 99.5 percentile.  He is the nation's leading ACT test prep workshop presenter having taught nearly 250,000 students over the last 32 years.  He travels the Midwest each school day teaching students, faculty, and parents how to beat the ACT.  His full workshop schedule can be found at calendar.chadcargill.com.  His website is chadcargill.com.
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    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle>Practical tips to increase ACT scores and win scholarships</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Chad Cargill</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>Chad Cargill took the ACT test 18 times in high school raising his score 13 points and scoring in the 99.5 percentile.  He is the nation's leading ACT test prep workshop presenter having taught nearly 250,000 students over the last 32 years.  He travels the Midwest each school day teaching students, faculty, and parents how to beat the ACT.  His full workshop schedule can be found at calendar.chadcargill.com.  His website is chadcargill.com.
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    <itunes:keywords>act, chad cargill, high school, prep, qualify, scholarships, test, classes</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:name>Chad Cargill</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>chad@chadcargill.com</itunes:email>
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  <title>51: 2 Important Rule Changes and How You Should Adjust</title>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2021 02:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
  <author>Chad Cargill</author>
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  <itunes:subtitle>In this episode, we discuss two important rule changes that may affect when you take the ACT and how you keep time during the test.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>17:24</itunes:duration>
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  <description>In this episode, we discuss two important rule changes that may affect when you take the ACT and how you keep time during the test. 
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  <itunes:keywords>act, high school, watch, rule change, time</itunes:keywords>
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    <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we discuss two important rule changes that may affect when you take the ACT and how you keep time during the test.</p>]]>
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  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>In this episode, we discuss two important rule changes that may affect when you take the ACT and how you keep time during the test.</p>]]>
  </itunes:summary>
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  <title>Episode 10: The Right Way to Keep Time on the ACT</title>
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  <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2020 12:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
  <author>Chad Cargill</author>
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  <itunes:author>Chad Cargill</itunes:author>
  <itunes:subtitle>The way most students keep time on the ACT is wrong.  Listen to this episode to learn the right way.  This episode teaches the easiest way to lower test anxiety and raise scores by effectively keeping your own time and working all the way to the end.</itunes:subtitle>
  <itunes:duration>19:45</itunes:duration>
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  <description>One of the downfalls of being an inexperienced ACT test taker is you may not know how much time you have left. The tests are very long and difficult to finish. As mentioned earlier, you should always answer every question. If you run out of time without every question answered, your score will not be as high as it could be. Time seems to pass very quickly during a difficult section of the test. Be aware of the time but not terrified of it. Using a wall clock in the testing center may not be the best method. I found that trying to keep time on my watch or a simple wall clock often confused me, and concentrating solely on the test often caused me to forget when the test started and when it was supposed to end. In order to prevent this unnecessary confusion, I created my own method of time keeping. I wore a simple three-handed (hour, minute, and second) watch. Before a section began, I let the second hand on my watch rotate until it pointed to the twelve. Then I stopped the second hand from moving by pulling out the crown. Next, I adjusted the other hands so that the clock read exactly noon. Then I backed the time from noon for the amount of time allotted for the section. For example on the English test, which lasts 45 minutes, I moved the clock to read 11:15. When the test administrator said, "Go," I started the clock. I knew at all times during the test that when my watch read straight up noon, the test was over. No questions. No confusion. This method may seem somewhat ridiculous, but if you want to reduce confusion and improve your score, master a time keeping method. A digital watch can also be used if you want to purchase one, but it can not make noise or communicate such as an Apple watch.
Finally, when the test administrators announce there are five minutes remaining in each section, you should ignore them. First of all, you already know the time because you are keeping time on your watch. The other reason is five minutes is a lot of time. For example, the science test is six passages designed to be of approximately equal length and difficulty. The science test as a whole is 35 minutes long. Thirty-five minutes divided by six equal passages is five minutes and 50 seconds. At the five minute call if you think your test is over and you panic, you are greatly reducing your score. Many students start guessing when the test administrator calls five minutes. If you do that, you are going to guess on approximately 24 questions total in English, math, reading, and science. If the guessing odds play out, you will get about 6 of the 24 correct. Consider the following: if you score a 19, you are getting about half the questions right. If you do this while guessing when they call five minutes, you got 6 out of 24 rather than 12 out of 24. That is a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT. Did you know that a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT is over a one composite score increase? If you are guessing at 5 minutes and scoring a 19, try the method described above, and your composite ACT score should increase to at least a 20 doing this alone!
I’d love to connect with you and keep you posted on upcoming episodes and resources.  For a free downloadable pdf What Scholarship Committees Look for and How to Win Them, go to scholarships.chadcargill.com (http://scholarships.chadcargill.com), and get your guide now.
For a free downloadable pdf of Key Things You Must Know on Test Day, go to testday.chadcargill.com (testday.chadcargill.com), and get your guide now.
If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcast app.  Leave a shout out for your high school, and I may read it on a future podcast.  
If you have questions, leave a comment here or on the Chad Cargill Workshops Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/Chad-Cargill-Workshops-22077611182/?ref=bookmarks) page.
To view the workshop calendar, go to calendar.chadcargill.com (http://calendar.chadcargill.com). You can also order the prep book Chad Cargill's ACT and sign up for speed reading at chadcargill.com. If you are interested in hosting a workshop at your high school, call our office at (405) 454-3233 or email penny@chadcargill.com.
chadcargill.com (http://www.chadcargill.com)
Twitter: @ChadCargill
Thanks for listening to the podcast!
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  <itunes:keywords>test anxiety, ACT, test prep, time, timed test</itunes:keywords>
  <content:encoded>
    <![CDATA[<p>One of the downfalls of being an inexperienced ACT test taker is you may not know how much time you have left. The tests are very long and difficult to finish. As mentioned earlier, you should always answer every question. If you run out of time without every question answered, your score will not be as high as it could be. Time seems to pass very quickly during a difficult section of the test. Be aware of the time but not terrified of it. Using a wall clock in the testing center may not be the best method. I found that trying to keep time on my watch or a simple wall clock often confused me, and concentrating solely on the test often caused me to forget when the test started and when it was supposed to end. In order to prevent this unnecessary confusion, I created my own method of time keeping. I wore a simple three-handed (hour, minute, and second) watch. Before a section began, I let the second hand on my watch rotate until it pointed to the twelve. Then I stopped the second hand from moving by pulling out the crown. Next, I adjusted the other hands so that the clock read exactly noon. Then I backed the time from noon for the amount of time allotted for the section. For example on the English test, which lasts 45 minutes, I moved the clock to read 11:15. When the test administrator said, &quot;Go,&quot; I started the clock. I knew at all times during the test that when my watch read straight up noon, the test was over. No questions. No confusion. This method may seem somewhat ridiculous, but if you want to reduce confusion and improve your score, master a time keeping method. A digital watch can also be used if you want to purchase one, but it can not make noise or communicate such as an Apple watch.<br>
Finally, when the test administrators announce there are five minutes remaining in each section, you should ignore them. First of all, you already know the time because you are keeping time on your watch. The other reason is five minutes is a lot of time. For example, the science test is six passages designed to be of approximately equal length and difficulty. The science test as a whole is 35 minutes long. Thirty-five minutes divided by six equal passages is five minutes and 50 seconds. At the five minute call if you think your test is over and you panic, you are greatly reducing your score. Many students start guessing when the test administrator calls five minutes. If you do that, you are going to guess on approximately 24 questions total in English, math, reading, and science. If the guessing odds play out, you will get about 6 of the 24 correct. Consider the following: if you score a 19, you are getting about half the questions right. If you do this while guessing when they call five minutes, you got 6 out of 24 rather than 12 out of 24. That is a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT. Did you know that a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT is over a one composite score increase? If you are guessing at 5 minutes and scoring a 19, try the method described above, and your composite ACT score should increase to at least a 20 doing this alone!</p>

<hr>

<p>I’d love to connect with you and keep you posted on upcoming episodes and resources.  For a free downloadable pdf What Scholarship Committees Look for and How to Win Them, go to <a href="http://scholarships.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">scholarships.chadcargill.com</a>, and get your guide now.</p>

<p>For a free downloadable pdf of Key Things You Must Know on Test Day, go to [testday.chadcargill.com](testday.chadcargill.com), and get your guide now.</p>

<p>If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcast app.  Leave a shout out for your high school, and I may read it on a future podcast.  </p>

<p>If you have questions, leave a comment here or on the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Chad-Cargill-Workshops-22077611182/?ref=bookmarks" rel="nofollow">Chad Cargill Workshops Facebook</a> page.</p>

<p>To view the workshop calendar, go to <a href="http://calendar.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">calendar.chadcargill.com</a>. You can also order the prep book Chad Cargill&#39;s ACT and sign up for speed reading at chadcargill.com. If you are interested in hosting a workshop at your high school, call our office at (405) 454-3233 or email <a href="mailto:penny@chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">penny@chadcargill.com</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">chadcargill.com</a><br>
Twitter: @ChadCargill</p>

<p>Thanks for listening to the podcast!</p>]]>
  </content:encoded>
  <itunes:summary>
    <![CDATA[<p>One of the downfalls of being an inexperienced ACT test taker is you may not know how much time you have left. The tests are very long and difficult to finish. As mentioned earlier, you should always answer every question. If you run out of time without every question answered, your score will not be as high as it could be. Time seems to pass very quickly during a difficult section of the test. Be aware of the time but not terrified of it. Using a wall clock in the testing center may not be the best method. I found that trying to keep time on my watch or a simple wall clock often confused me, and concentrating solely on the test often caused me to forget when the test started and when it was supposed to end. In order to prevent this unnecessary confusion, I created my own method of time keeping. I wore a simple three-handed (hour, minute, and second) watch. Before a section began, I let the second hand on my watch rotate until it pointed to the twelve. Then I stopped the second hand from moving by pulling out the crown. Next, I adjusted the other hands so that the clock read exactly noon. Then I backed the time from noon for the amount of time allotted for the section. For example on the English test, which lasts 45 minutes, I moved the clock to read 11:15. When the test administrator said, &quot;Go,&quot; I started the clock. I knew at all times during the test that when my watch read straight up noon, the test was over. No questions. No confusion. This method may seem somewhat ridiculous, but if you want to reduce confusion and improve your score, master a time keeping method. A digital watch can also be used if you want to purchase one, but it can not make noise or communicate such as an Apple watch.<br>
Finally, when the test administrators announce there are five minutes remaining in each section, you should ignore them. First of all, you already know the time because you are keeping time on your watch. The other reason is five minutes is a lot of time. For example, the science test is six passages designed to be of approximately equal length and difficulty. The science test as a whole is 35 minutes long. Thirty-five minutes divided by six equal passages is five minutes and 50 seconds. At the five minute call if you think your test is over and you panic, you are greatly reducing your score. Many students start guessing when the test administrator calls five minutes. If you do that, you are going to guess on approximately 24 questions total in English, math, reading, and science. If the guessing odds play out, you will get about 6 of the 24 correct. Consider the following: if you score a 19, you are getting about half the questions right. If you do this while guessing when they call five minutes, you got 6 out of 24 rather than 12 out of 24. That is a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT. Did you know that a difference of 6 questions spread over the four sections of the ACT is over a one composite score increase? If you are guessing at 5 minutes and scoring a 19, try the method described above, and your composite ACT score should increase to at least a 20 doing this alone!</p>

<hr>

<p>I’d love to connect with you and keep you posted on upcoming episodes and resources.  For a free downloadable pdf What Scholarship Committees Look for and How to Win Them, go to <a href="http://scholarships.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">scholarships.chadcargill.com</a>, and get your guide now.</p>

<p>For a free downloadable pdf of Key Things You Must Know on Test Day, go to [testday.chadcargill.com](testday.chadcargill.com), and get your guide now.</p>

<p>If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave a review on your podcast app.  Leave a shout out for your high school, and I may read it on a future podcast.  </p>

<p>If you have questions, leave a comment here or on the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Chad-Cargill-Workshops-22077611182/?ref=bookmarks" rel="nofollow">Chad Cargill Workshops Facebook</a> page.</p>

<p>To view the workshop calendar, go to <a href="http://calendar.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">calendar.chadcargill.com</a>. You can also order the prep book Chad Cargill&#39;s ACT and sign up for speed reading at chadcargill.com. If you are interested in hosting a workshop at your high school, call our office at (405) 454-3233 or email <a href="mailto:penny@chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">penny@chadcargill.com</a>.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.chadcargill.com" rel="nofollow">chadcargill.com</a><br>
Twitter: @ChadCargill</p>

<p>Thanks for listening to the podcast!</p>]]>
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