An ACT score of 23 is in the top 1/3 percentile of students. There are many colleges in each state that accept an ACT score of 23. Some examples are the University of Alabama, Stamford University, Troy University, Judson College, University of Arizona, John Brown University, Central Baptist College, University of California, University of Colorado, Wesley College, any many more.
You can separate yourself from other college applicants by obtaining a high score on the SAT or ACT. A 1300 on the SAT (critical reading plus math) and a 29 on the ACT will usually put you in a very good position at most colleges. Most colleges rank students according to their score, but you can help offset a lower score by having a lot of community service involvement.
Composite datatypes are the datatypes which can be constructed with in a program by using prmitive datatypes and other composite types.the act of constructing a composite data type is called composition..............
A degree in engineering would be your best bet. Probably either a degree in mechanical or general engineering. As to the second half of the question that all depends on personal preference, where you live, what your GPA was/is and what your SAT/ACT score is.
Commonwealth Act 294
An amplification is an act of amplifying, expanding or making larger, or the act of increasing some quantity such as voltage, power or current.
jbkfvjbljfghfh
having that score is not good because they give you 12 automatically....so if i was you i would retake it and study for the test this time.....
composite score
what is the ACT score composite score
A composite ACT score of 22.
The average ACT score for UCLA is a composite of 30
UIC, :)
Around a 25-29 composite score.
last year the average composite test score was a 21 (21.1)
North Carolina State University has not set a minimum ACT score. However, looking at the average scores of accepted applicants will give you a better idea of what NCSU is looking for. Mid-range scores (the scores of the top 25%-75% of the accepted applicants) range from 24-29 composite on the ACT.
ACT scores are never averaged and most colleges only take a person's best score from one sitting of the exam. However, there are a few colleges and universities out there that will superscore ACT composite scores. "Superscoring" is when, if someone takes multiple ACT tests, colleges will take the best subsections on each of the tests and come up with a new composite. For example, if someone received a 24 in English, 26 in Math, 28 in Science, and a 30 in Reading on their first try, that would be a score of 27. Imagine that they took the test a second time and got a 32 in English, a 30 in Math, a 28 in Science, and a 26 in Reading, which would be a composite score of 29. If a college were to superscore this student's ACT results, this student's new composite score would be a 30, consisting of a 32 in English, a 30 in Math, a 28 in Science, and a 30 in Reading...make sense? I hope so(:
36 (writing is not part of your composite score)