🚀 Early Adopter Price: $39/mo for life --d --h --m --s Claim Your Price →
Coming Soon
Expected availability: Summer 2026

This course is in active development. Preview the scope below and create a free account to be notified the moment it goes live.

Notify me
ACT Available Summer 2026

ACT® English Reading

ACT English and Reading equips high‑school students with the grammar, punctuation, and rhetorical analysis skills needed to ace the ACT English and Reading sections, boosting college‑readiness scores.

Who Should Take This

Students preparing for the ACT, especially those aiming for competitive college admissions, benefit from focused practice on grammar conventions and passage analysis. The course is ideal for high‑school juniors and seniors with basic English proficiency who seek to improve accuracy, speed, and rhetorical insight to raise their overall ACT score.

What's Included in AccelaStudy® AI

Adaptive Knowledge Graph
Practice Questions
Lesson Modules
Console Simulator Labs
Exam Tips & Strategy
20 Activity Formats

Course Outline

75 learning goals
1 ACT English
3 topics

Conventions of Standard English

  • Sentence Structure and Formation
  • Punctuation
  • Usage and Grammar

Knowledge of Language

  • Identify wordy, redundant, or overly verbose constructions in sentences and recognize which revision achieves the most concise expression without losing meaning.
  • Apply principles of precision and concision to select the word or phrase that most accurately and efficiently conveys the intended meaning in a passage context.
  • Determine whether the tone and style of a word or phrase are consistent with the overall tone of a passage, selecting replacements that match the established register.
  • Analyze how sentence-level syntax choices (such as varying sentence length, using active versus passive voice, or reordering clauses) affect the clarity and rhetorical impact of a passage.
  • Evaluate competing word choices to determine which option best achieves the writer's stated purpose, considering connotation, denotation, and audience awareness.
  • Interpret how shifts in register (formal to informal or technical to conversational) within a passage affect the reader's engagement and the writer's credibility with the intended audience.

Production of Writing

  • Topic Development
  • Organization, Unity, and Cohesion
2 ACT Reading
4 topics

Key Ideas and Details

  • Explicit Meaning and Textual Evidence
  • Central Ideas and Summarization
  • Relationships Within Texts

Craft and Structure

  • Word Meaning in Context
  • Text Structure Analysis
  • Author Purpose and Point of View

Integration of Knowledge and Ideas

  • Arguments and Claims
  • Comparing Texts and Paired Passages

Passage Type Strategies

  • Literary Narrative and Prose Fiction
  • Social Science Passages
  • Humanities Passages
  • Natural Science Passages

Scope

Included Topics

  • ACT English section (75 questions, 45 minutes): Production of Writing (29-32%) including topic development, organization, unity, and cohesion; Knowledge of Language (13-19%) including precision, concision, style/tone, and syntax; Conventions of Standard English (51-56%) including sentence structure/formation, punctuation (commas, apostrophes, semicolons, colons, dashes), and usage (subject-verb agreement, pronoun agreement, verb tense, modifier placement, parallel structure, word confusion).
  • ACT Reading section (40 questions, 35 minutes): Key Ideas and Details (52-60%) including explicit meaning, central ideas, summarization, and relationships (sequential, cause-effect, compare-contrast); Craft and Structure (25-30%) including word meaning in context, text structure analysis, and author purpose/point of view; Integration of Knowledge and Ideas (13-23%) including arguments and claims and comparing texts.
  • ACT Reading passage types: literary narrative/prose fiction, social science, humanities, natural science, and paired passages appearing in one of the four passage sets.
  • Rhetorical skills tested on ACT English: strategy (topic development, relevance, emphasis), organization (sentence order, transitions, introductions, conclusions), and style (writing style, tone, word choice, economy of language).
  • Grammar and mechanics tested on ACT English: sentence structure (run-ons, fragments, misplaced modifiers, parallelism, comma splices), grammar and usage (subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, pronoun case, verb tense and form, adjective/adverb confusion, idioms), and punctuation (commas in series, commas with nonessential clauses, apostrophes in possessives and contractions, semicolons, colons, dashes, end punctuation).
  • Reading comprehension strategies: close reading, annotation, evidence-based reasoning, inference, main idea identification, summarization, vocabulary in context, understanding of text structure, and comparative analysis across paired passages.

Not Covered

  • ACT Mathematics, ACT Science, and ACT Writing (optional essay) sections, which are covered in separate domain specifications.
  • Advanced literary criticism theories, graduate-level rhetoric and composition, and linguistics beyond what is tested on the ACT.
  • Creative writing techniques, journalistic writing conventions, and technical writing formats not assessed by the ACT English section.
  • Speed-reading techniques and test-taking strategies that are not content-based (e.g., process of elimination heuristics without content understanding).

ACT English Reading is coming soon

Adaptive learning that maps your knowledge and closes your gaps.

Create Free Account to Be Notified

Trademark Notice

ACT® is a registered trademark of ACT, Inc. ACT, Inc. does not endorse this product.

AccelaStudy® and Renkara® are registered trademarks of Renkara Media Group, Inc. All third-party marks are the property of their respective owners and are used for nominative identification only.