ACT Test Prep Plan: Weekly Study Schedule to Boost Your Score

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A Plan Without a Schedule Is Just a Wish

You know you need to prepare for the ACT. You've read about the format, the sections, the scoring. You've probably even downloaded a practice test.

But here's where most Singapore students stall: they never build an actual weekly schedule.

They study when they feel like it. They skip Science because it feels hard. They do Reading passages without timing themselves. And three weeks before test day, they panic.

This guide exists to prevent exactly that.

ACT test prep works when it's structured, consistent, and built around your specific score gap. What follows is a complete, week-by-week plan you can start using immediately — whether you have 6 weeks, 10 weeks, or 14 weeks until your test date.

 


 

Quick Overview

  • Every effective prep plan starts with a diagnostic test

  • Weekly schedules should balance all four sections — not just your favourites

  • Full-length timed tests must be built into the schedule from Week 4 onwards

  • Error review is not optional — it's where improvement actually happens

  • The final week before the test should be light review and rest, not cramming

  • Adjust the schedule based on your diagnostic results and score gap

 


 

Before You Begin: The Three Things You Must Know

Before building any schedule, answer these three questions:

1. What is your current score? Take a full diagnostic test under timed conditions. Score each section separately.

2. What is your target score? Be realistic. Reference the university score ranges in your target list.

3. How many weeks do you have? Count the weeks between today and your test date. This determines which schedule below fits you.

 


 

Choose Your Schedule Length

Weeks Available

Best For

6 weeks

Students scoring 28+ needing targeted improvement

10 weeks

Most Singapore students — the recommended standard

14 weeks

Students scoring below 24 or targeting 33+ from a lower base

 


 

The 6-Week Intensive ACT Test Prep Schedule

For students with a strong baseline (28+) and limited time.

Week 1: Diagnose and Prioritise

  • Day 1: Full diagnostic test — timed, all sections

  • Day 2: Score analysis — identify top 3 weakest question types per section

  • Day 3: English — targeted grammar rule review (commas, semicolons, transitions)

  • Day 4: Science — data interpretation drills (30 min)

  • Day 5: Math — review weakest topic area identified in diagnostic

  • Day 6: Reading — two timed passages (8 min 45 sec each)

  • Day 7: Rest

Week 2: Section Deep Dives

  • Day 1: English — rhetorical skills and passage-level questions

  • Day 2: Math — coordinate geometry and intermediate algebra

  • Day 3: Science — research summary passage practice

  • Day 4: Reading — timed passage drills with error review

  • Day 5: English — full timed section (45 min)

  • Day 6: Math — full timed section (60 min)

  • Day 7: Rest

Week 3: Timed Section Practice

  • Day 1: Science — conflicting viewpoints strategy and practice

  • Day 2: Reading — full timed section (35 min) with review

  • Day 3: Error log review — identify recurring patterns

  • Day 4: Math — targeted weak topic drills

  • Day 5: English + Science — back to back timed sections

  • Day 6: Full-length practice test (all sections, timed)

  • Day 7: Rest

Week 4: Practice Test Review and Targeting

  • Day 1: Full review of Week 3 practice test — section by section

  • Day 2: Attack weakest section from practice test results

  • Day 3: Math — mixed topic timed drills

  • Day 4: Reading + Science — back to back timed sections

  • Day 5: English — focused weak area drilling

  • Day 6: Second full-length practice test

  • Day 7: Rest

Week 5: Precision Drilling

  • Day 1: Review Week 4 practice test thoroughly

  • Day 2: English — final grammar rule consolidation

  • Day 3: Science — full timed section with review

  • Day 4: Math — hardest question types (last 15 questions practice)

  • Day 5: Reading — pacing drills — strict 8-min-45-sec per passage

  • Day 6: Third full-length practice test

  • Day 7: Rest

Week 6: Final Preparation

  • Day 1: Review Week 5 practice test — note final patterns

  • Day 2: Light review of error log — no new content

  • Day 3: One timed section in your weakest area only

  • Day 4: Light mixed review — 30 minutes maximum

  • Day 5: Rest completely

  • Day 6: Prepare test day bag, confirm test centre location and travel time

  • Day 7: Test Day — arrive early, stay calm, execute your strategy

 


 

The 10-Week Standard ACT Test Prep Schedule

The most recommended timeline for Singapore students.

Week 1: Foundation and Diagnosis

  • Full diagnostic test on Day 1

  • Two days of error analysis and section breakdown

  • Begin English grammar rules: punctuation focus

  • Begin Science: data representation passage drills

  • End of week: set section priority list

Week 2: English and Science Focus

  • English: sentence structure and rhetorical skills (3 sessions)

  • Science: research summary passages (2 sessions)

  • Math: pre-algebra and elementary algebra review (2 sessions)

  • Daily: 20-minute focused drills on weakest section

Week 3: Math and Reading Introduction

  • Math: coordinate geometry (3 sessions)

  • Reading: passage type introduction + skim-and-locate method

  • English: timed section practice (45 min)

  • Science: conflicting viewpoints introduction

Week 4: First Full Practice Test

  • Three days of section drills (weakest two sections)

  • Full-length timed practice test on Day 5

  • Two days of thorough review and error logging

  • Adjust schedule based on results

Week 5: Targeted Section Attack

  • Spend 60% of time on lowest-scoring section from Practice Test 1

  • Math: plane geometry and trigonometry overview

  • Reading: timed passage drills (strict timing)

  • Science: full timed section with review

Week 6: Cross-Section Stamina Building

  • Begin practicing two sections back-to-back (simulate test fatigue)

  • English + Math back-to-back (Day 2)

  • Reading + Science back-to-back (Day 4)

  • Error log review — identify top 5 recurring mistake types

  • Full-length timed practice test on Day 6

Week 7: Practice Test 2 Review and Precision Work

  • Two full days reviewing Practice Test 2 in detail

  • Targeted drills on weakest question types identified

  • Math: timed 30-question sets focusing on weak areas

  • Reading: vocabulary in context and inference questions

  • Science: graph and table interpretation speed drills

Week 8: Simulate Real Test Conditions

  • All practice this week done under exact test conditions

  • No pausing, no phone, no extensions

  • Full-length practice test on Day 4 — treat it like the real thing

  • Review on Day 5 and 6

  • Begin Writing practice if required by your target universities

Week 9: Final Weak Area Intervention

  • Review all three practice tests — find the patterns

  • Spend 70% of prep time on the section with the most remaining gap

  • English: final grammar rule check

  • Math: calculator strategy and final algebra review

  • One final full-length practice test on Day 6

Week 10: Consolidation and Test Day Readiness

  • Day 1–2: Review final practice test — note last patterns

  • Day 3: Light review of error log only — no new content

  • Day 4: One timed section in your weakest area (30 min max)

  • Day 5: Complete rest

  • Day 6: Test day logistics — print ticket, prepare bag, confirm route

  • Day 7: Test Day

 


 

The 14-Week Comprehensive ACT Test Prep Schedule

For students scoring below 24 or building from a lower base toward 33+.

Weeks 1–2: Format Mastery

  • Diagnostic test in Week 1

  • Deep dive into each section's format, question types, and timing

  • No timed practice yet — understand before you drill

  • Begin English grammar rules and Science data basics

Weeks 3–5: Content Foundation

  • English: complete grammar rule review (all top 20 ACT rules)

  • Math: systematic review from pre-algebra through geometry

  • Reading: passage type study and question type identification

  • Science: data representation and research summary practice

  • First timed section attempts at end of Week 5

Weeks 6–8: Timed Section Drills

  • Daily 30–45 minute timed section drills

  • Full-length timed test at end of Week 6

  • Full-length timed test at end of Week 8

  • Thorough error review after each test

  • Error log maintained from Week 6 onwards

Weeks 9–11: Score Gap Targeting

  • Identify your two weakest sections from practice tests

  • Spend 70% of prep time on those two sections

  • One full-length timed test per week

  • Mid-week error log reviews — identify repeating patterns

  • Begin Writing practice in Week 11 if required

Weeks 12–13: Simulation and Precision

  • All practice under real test conditions

  • Two full-length timed tests (one per week)

  • Precision drilling on question types still causing drops

  • Review all error logs from the full 12-week period

Week 14: Final Preparation

  • Light review only — no new content

  • One timed section mid-week (weakest section)

  • Two days complete rest before test day

  • Test day logistics confirmed by Day 5

  • Test Day on Day 7

 


 

Daily Study Time Recommendations

Prep Intensity

Daily Study Time

Weekly Total

Light (maintaining)

30–45 minutes

3–4 hours

Standard

60–90 minutes

7–10 hours

Intensive

90–120 minutes

10–14 hours

Full intensive (final 2 weeks)

60 minutes maximum

5–6 hours

Important: Diminishing returns set in after 2 hours of focused prep per day. Consistency over time beats daily marathons.

 


 

What to Do After Every Practice Test

This is where most students shortchange themselves. Here's the exact review process:

Step 1: Score each section separately — note the raw score and estimated scaled score

Step 2: For every wrong answer, identify:

  • Was it a careless error?

  • A content gap (didn't know the rule or concept)?

  • A timing error (ran out of time)?

  • A strategy error (used the wrong approach)?

Step 3: Add each wrong answer to your error log with the question type

Step 4: Find patterns — are you losing 4 points to commas in English? 6 points to inference questions in Reading? 5 points to graph interpretation in Science?

Step 5: Build the following week's schedule around fixing those specific patterns

One thoroughly reviewed practice test is worth more than three tests done casually.

 


 

Real Student Scenario: How Jun Wei Used a 10-Week Schedule to Hit 32

Jun Wei, a JC1 student in Singapore, started his ACT prep with a diagnostic score of 26 — English 27, Math 25, Reading 24, Science 28.

He followed the 10-week standard schedule above, with one modification: he added 15 extra minutes of Math practice every day because it was his biggest gap.

His weekly schedule:

  • Monday: Math focused drills (45 min) + English grammar (30 min)

  • Tuesday: Science passage practice (40 min)

  • Wednesday: Reading timed passages (35 min) + Math (15 min)

  • Thursday: Error log review + targeted weak area drilling (45 min)

  • Friday: Math (45 min) + English timed section on alternate weeks

  • Saturday: Full practice test every other week (alternating with section drills)

  • Sunday: Rest

After 10 weeks: English 31, Math 30, Reading 30, Science 33. Composite: 31.

One more targeted 6-week push later — final score: 33.

 


 

Common Weekly Schedule Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Skipping rest days — cognitive fatigue kills performance and retention

  2. Doing the same section every day — variety builds overall stamina

  3. Practising without timing — timing is a skill, not a given

  4. Front-loading all study in the first half and coasting toward test day

  5. Adding new content in the final two weeks — consolidate, don't expand

  6. Not adjusting the schedule after each practice test — let your results guide your priorities

  7. Studying for 3+ hours in one sitting — split into two sessions if needed

 


 

Tutor Pro Tips on Weekly ACT Scheduling

  • Treat your study sessions like school classes — scheduled, non-negotiable, with a specific topic

  • The Saturday practice test habit is the single most important weekly routine you can build from Week 4 onwards

  • Don't skip Science drills because they feel different from school science — it's the fastest-improving section for most Singapore students

  • Schedule error review the day after your practice test — not immediately after, when you're tired

  • Build in one light week every 4–5 weeks to consolidate before pushing harder again

 


 

How The Princeton Review Singapore Builds Your Personalised Schedule

A generic schedule gets generic results.

Online Test Prep with The Princeton Review Singapore builds customised ACT prep plans around each student's diagnostic results, target score, school schedule, and CCA commitments — so your prep fits your life, not the other way around.

Their structured ACT programmes combine the weekly scheduling framework above with expert tutor guidance, live feedback on practice tests, and targeted intervention on your specific weak areas.

 


 

FAQs: ACT Test Prep Schedule

Q: How many weeks of preparation do I realistically need? Most Singapore students benefit from 10–12 weeks. Students targeting 33+ from a lower base should plan for 14–16 weeks to allow for multiple full practice test cycles.

Q: How many practice tests should I complete before test day? A minimum of 4 full-length timed practice tests. Students targeting 32+ should aim for 6–8 full tests with thorough review after each.

Q: Should I study every day or take days off? Take at least one full rest day per week. Consistent 6-day prep with one rest day outperforms 7-day burnout schedules every time.

Q: What should I do the week before the ACT? Light review only — no new content. One timed section mid-week at most. Prioritise sleep, nutrition, and reducing stress. Rest is preparation.

Q: Is it better to study in the morning or evening? Your ACT test starts in the morning. Practising at the same time of day as your actual test helps your brain perform optimally during the exam.

Q: How do I stay motivated throughout a 10–14 week prep period? Track your progress visibly — graph your section scores after each practice test. Seeing improvement, even incremental, sustains motivation better than any external reward.

 


 

Conclusion: The Schedule Is the Strategy

Talent without structure produces inconsistent results. Structure without talent still produces steady improvement.

The students who hit 33, 34, 35 on the ACT aren't necessarily the most naturally gifted. They're the ones who showed up every week with a plan, executed it consistently, reviewed their mistakes honestly, and adjusted when something wasn't working.

This schedule is your plan.

The ACT test prep journey is 10 or 14 weeks of focused, daily commitment. That's it. In the context of a university application that shapes the next four years of your life — it's a small investment with an enormous return.

Build your schedule today. Start your diagnostic this weekend. And commit to the process with the same discipline that got you this far in Singapore's demanding academic system.

You have everything you need. Now use it.

 

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