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The Need to Connect: Students in Rural U.S. Struggle Accessing Technology, Hurting Their Ability to Learn

ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning Offers Solutions for Fixing the Situation IOWA CITY, Iowa—High school students in rural parts of ...

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ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning Offers Solutions for Fixing the Situation

IOWA CITY, Iowa—High school students in rural parts of the U.S. face significant challenges accessing technology that may adversely affect their learning — access that students in more populated parts of the country and policymakers may take for granted, according to surveys of students who took the national ACT® test. However, ACT’s experts also suggest stakeholders can take important steps that can help every student succeed, no matter where he or she lives.

The report, “Rural Students: Technology, Coursework and Extracurricular Activities,” found that rural students were less likely than non-rural students to claim that their home internet access was “great” (36 percent vs. 46 percent).

Similarly, rural students were almost twice as likely as non-rural students to state that their internet access was “unpredictable” (16 percent vs. 9 percent). At school, however, there were no substantive differences in reported internet quality between rural and non-rural students.

Rural and non-rural students also had differing access to devices both at school and at home. Notably, rural students reported somewhat less access to a laptop or desktop computer at home compared to non-rural students (82 percent vs. 87 percent).

Given that rural students lack access to rigorous coursework, this lack of technological access may impede their course-taking success and their ability to participate in online courses and other opportunities for personalized learning.

Why Technology Matters


Jim Larimore, chief officer for ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning, says, “Too often students in rural areas are overlooked when it comes to education policy reform, despite the fact that nearly one in five students in U.S. public elementary and secondary schools live in a rural area. We need to do a better job of closing these equity gaps to ensure that we’re providing all students with the opportunity to be successful.”

Larimore points out that the majority of rural students in nearly half the states are from low-income families and they generally earn lower scores on standardized high school assessments, attend college at lower rates than do students from non-rural areas, and, as highlighted in the report, have less access to rigorous coursework.

Of the students surveyed, those in rural areas were less likely than non-rural students to complete (or plan to complete) the ACT-recommended core curriculum (76 percent vs. 81 percent). ACT research has found that students who complete a minimum core curriculum that includes four years of English, three years of mathematics (including rigorous courses in Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II), three years of science (including rigorous courses in Biology, Chemistry, and Physics), and three years of social studies earn higher ACT scores than those who do not.

ACT believes that efforts to ameliorate the effects of some of these issues depend increasingly on access to technology, such as broadband and devices. Access to technology is important for education, not only because there is a plethora of technology-based resources for learning, but also to teach students the basic computer skills that are important for many careers.

Further, rural students may have a greater need for technology compared to their non-rural peers in order to access courses not offered at their school, including participation in online dual enrollment courses, and to increase opportunities for personalized learning.

Access to a computer with a dedicated keyboard also varied between rural and non-rural students. Lack of such access may make schoolwork-related tasks like conducting research or writing more difficult.

In addition, a higher percentage of rural students reported access to only one device at home compared to students in non-rural areas (24 percent vs. 11 percent). Given the potential benefits of one-to-one device initiatives, the lack of access to devices could create additional disparities in access to more personalized learning opportunities.

Lower percentages of rural students than non-rural students reported using technology to research/find information online (51 percent vs. 57 percent) and to complete homework assignments (59 percent vs. 68 percent).

Bright Spot: Extracurricular Activities


In positive news for rural students, respondents had greater access to extracurricular activities than non-rural students. Extracurricular activities provide students with an opportunity to explore academic and non-academic interests. Extracurricular activity participation is related to school engagement and may also reduce the likelihood of dropping out of school. In addition, participation in certain extracurricular activities may be related to student learning growth.

Policy Solutions


The report notes that although the Federal Communications Commission provides funding for the E-Rate Program, which provides eligible schools and libraries discounts of up to 90 percent to fund affordable telecommunications and internet access, 6 percent of schools still do not meet federal connectivity benchmarks—and the vast majority of those schools are in rural areas. Among ensuring all schools meet the federal connectivity benchmarks, the report builds off the previous research brief “The Digital Divide and Educational Equity” and recommends targeting rural students’ access to technology- both in school and at home – as a way to support their learning and enable access to advanced coursework and personalized learning opportunities.

ACT recommends the following:


  1. Improve access to technology both at school and home.
    The Federal E-Rate program must continue to fund access to affordable broadband internet to rural areas and completely close the gap between schools with broadband access and those without
  2. Increase opportunities for rigorous course taking.
    Students must have access to and be encouraged to take a minimum core curriculum of four years of English, three years of mathematics, three years of science, and three years of social studies. The survey found that students in rural areas were less likely than non-rural students to complete (or plan to complete) the ACT-recommended core curriculum (76 percent vs. 81 percent).
  3. Expand opportunities for personalized learning.
    Students need the opportunity to receive personalized, student-centered learning. In the case of the rural students in the survey, personalized learning could help provide greater access to advanced coursework.

ACT believes these policy solutions can also be applied to students in other communities who also cope with such challenges. For instance, the ACT study “The Digital Divide and Educational Equity” found that the overwhelming majority (85 percent) of students who said they had access to only one device at home were classified as underserved (low income, first generation in college or minority).

Report Data Sources


The data for the research came from two different student surveys administered to selected students who participated in national ACT testing in 2018. The ACT report was written by Michelle Croft, Ph.D./J.D., and Raeal Moore, Ph.D. The research used descriptions from the National Center for Education Statistics to define the areas where students went to school.

The report is a collaborative project that includes input from the following:

  • ACT Research leads the field with authority and high-quality scientific evidence in support of education and workforce practices, solutions, and services. Our mission-driven team comprises a variety of backgrounds and disciplines, and offers a wide spectrum of knowledge and skills, enabling us to deliver quality, high-impact products and services aligned to ACT’s strategy and mission. Together, our research teams provide policymakers, educators, parents, and learners with research-based insights to inform their decision-making, and deliver educators and workforce development professionals with tools and services needed for education and career navigation.
  • ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning, which focuses on closing gaps in equity, opportunity and achievement for underserved populations and working learners. Through purposeful investments, employee engagement, and thoughtful advocacy efforts, the Center supports innovative partnerships, actionable research, initiatives, campaigns, and programs to further ACT’s mission of helping people achieve education and workplace success. http://equityinlearning.act.org
  • ACT State and Federal Programs, which is dedicated to positioning ACT as a thought leader at the national and state levels to inform and influence education and workforce policymaking and is made up of four interrelated units staffed by experts in policy development, federal and state government relations, and outreach to states and national organizations. Together, State and Federal Programs provides insights and resources to states, workforce and education entities, and other organizations to help individuals navigate their education and career pathways. https://www.act.org/content/act/en/state-and-federal-programs.html


About ACT's Center for Equity in Learning

ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning focuses on closing gaps in equity, opportunity, and achievement for underserved populations and working learners. Through purposeful investments, employee engagement, and thoughtful advocacy efforts, the Center supports innovative partnerships, actionable research, initiatives, campaigns, and programs to further ACT’s mission of helping people achieve education and workplace success. http://equityinlearning.act.org

About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career. 

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About ACT

Black History Month: Celebrating Resilience, Persistence & Determination

Just as I started high school in 1976, President Gerald R. Ford signed a proclamation declaring February as Black History Month because as...

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Just as I started high school in 1976, President Gerald R. Ford signed a proclamation declaring February as Black History Month because as he said, “the country needs to seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history.” He was certainly correct. As a young black man, I had limited knowledge of black history and even less exposure to black culture.

I grew up in the small southwestern town of Los Alamos, New Mexico. If I had a nickel for every time in life I have heard, “I didn’t know black people lived there,” I would be a wealthy man. However, there was some truth to that statement; Los Alamos only had five black families living there when I grew up. Today, demographically, not much has changed. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, black people represent less than one half of a percent of the total population.

Los Alamos is not known for its cultural diversity, despite New Mexico having the highest percentage of Hispanic and Latino Americans and the second highest percentage of Native Americans as a population proportion among the 50 states. Los Alamos is known as the birthplace of the atomic bomb. It was where the Manhattan Project was launched and it is home to Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), an elite, national scientific research community funded by the federal government. LANL is thought of as the place where all the “top secret,” confidential, undisclosed, classified information about our nation’s security and defense is kept. It was also the place that brought my parents to Los Alamos.

My father, Robert L. Ratliff was a biochemist. He earned his doctorate degree from Saint Louis University during a time when segregation was still legal and widely practiced in St. Louis and many other American communities. He was recruited to work at LANL on genetic engineering and cloning, long before those terms were familiar to most of the American public. The lab he ran made significant contributions to genetic engineering: it was the first to successfully clone living tissue that was viable (frog eggs); he became famous for the manufacture of terminal transferase, a genetic glue, that allows scientists to add nucleotides and recombine bits of DNA. Its application led to the creation of synthetic human insulin which was a godsend for diabetics who were either allergic to the available swine-based insulin, or would not use it for religious reasons. Finally, his lab played a lead role in the ultimate mapping of the human genome, allowing modern day scientists, doctors and researchers limitless information about our DNA and how it relates to our health and longevity.

My father’s academic and professional accomplishments were likely considered improbable to many but for me, they spoke to who he was, who many black people were and still are today – resilient, persistent and determined to achieve and be contributors to their communities.

Martin Luther King’s leadership paved the way for all blacks to have the rights necessary to expand their ability to participate in and contribute to a stronger nation. In 1955 he supported Rosa Parks by leading the Montgomery bus boycott which lasted for 385 days! During this time King was arrested, his home was bombed and he was subjected to personal abuse and threats. Dr. King’s resilience, persistence and determination allowed this protest to conclude on December 20, 1956 with the US Supreme Court ruling that segregation on public buses was unconstitutional.

When I think about Black History Month, I think about my father, Rosa Parks, Dr. King and “the accomplishments of black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout history” who as President Ford believed, have contributed significantly to strengthening our democracy and helping to create a more perfect union!!

The work we’re doing at ACT, and particularly within ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning, to close gaps in equity, opportunity and achievement, propels us toward the goal of helping underserved students and workers find their fit and contribute their talents to our nation.

I’m proud of the work we do every day to promote holistic, inclusive and transformational partnerships, products and services that help students navigate their unique journeys to success. Everyone, of every color, creed and background has a purpose in life, and our purpose is to help individuals find their path to achieve success.

About the Center for Equity in Learning


ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning focuses on closing gaps in equity, opportunity, and achievement for underserved populations and working learners. Through purposeful investments, employee engagement, and thoughtful advocacy efforts, the Center supports innovative partnerships, actionable research, initiatives, campaigns, and programs to further ACT’s mission of helping people achieve education and workplace success. http://equityinlearning.act.org

About My Success


Success is as unique as a fingerprint—and so is the journey to achieve it. The My Success campaign was created to provide a community of support, stories and resources for lifelong learning, to encourage and inspire individuals navigating their journey to find success. Join our community of support and share your story of success by using #MyStoryMySuccess or visiting mysuccess.act.org.

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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

Santonu Jana named ACT Chief Financial Officer

IOWA CITY, Iowa—Santonu Jana, a finance and strategy executive with extensive experience serving the K-12 education and educational techno...

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IOWA CITY, Iowa—Santonu Jana, a finance and strategy executive with extensive experience serving the K-12 education and educational technology markets, has been named chief financial officer at ACT. Jana’s selection as CFO is the latest in a series of moves by ACT to transition from an organization best known for assessment to a global leader across the fields of learning, measurement, and navigation.

“Education is at an inflection point where we increasingly have the theory, technology and analytical techniques to improve outcomes for millions of students,” said ACT CEO Marten Roorda. “Santonu Jana’s expertise in finance, technology and the markets we serve will be invaluable as we move forward in our transformation.”

Jana is managing principal for Axle Finance and Strategy Consulting. He previously served as vice president for finance at Scantron and Pearson Education, held senior positions with Advance Auto Parts and American Express, and was as an associate with McKinsey & Company, the global consulting firm.

Throughout his career, Jana has earned a strong reputation in areas aligned to ACT’s transformation, including financial analytics, strategic planning and acquisition integration.

“Contributing to ACT’s diversification and where they want to take the industry is an exciting opportunity,” said Jana. “I look forward to working with my new colleagues in making a difference for our customers, team members and the communities we serve.”

Jana earned a Master of Business Administration degree from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire; was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst designation by the CFA Institute in Charlottesville, Virginia; and earned a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering degree from Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur, India.

Jana will begin his duties at ACT on February 25. He will be moving to the Iowa City area with his wife and their two children in the summer.

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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

2019 ACT College & Career Readiness Champions Announced Today

Congratulations to our 2019 champions! Today we celebrate the success of students and education and workforce professionals who are shinin...

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Congratulations to our 2019 champions! Today we celebrate the success of students and education and workforce professionals who are shining exemplars for the advancement of college and career readiness for all.

Join us in recognizing the high school seniors, and the K-12, postsecondary, and workforce professionals in each state who are demonstrating persistence through adversity, a collaborative approach to problem-solving, and a passion for learning and leading others to find their own success. Use #ACTChampions and tag @ACT to tell us about the champions in your state, and to cheer them on.

Learn more about this initiative and what it means to be a champion from our district managers.

Southeast District Manager, Bobby Rush
(Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia)



Midwest District Manager, Tim Osborn
(Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin)



Northeast District Manager, Debra FitzGerald
(Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, D.C., Delaware, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia)



Southwest District Manager, Mike DiNicola
(Arkansas, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas)



Northwest District Manager, Savanah Schott
(Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming)



2019 ACT Champions

High School Seniors (Student Champions)

Katherine Grubbs (Alabama)
Franklyn Correa (Alaska)
Mac McGraw (Arizona)
Adam Ray (Arkansas)
Angel Emodi (California)
Amy Pollart (Colorado)
Hae Young Yi (Connecticut)
Esha Shah (Delaware)
Ella Gantman (District of Columbia)
Hannah Faughnan (Florida)
Jochebed Yeboah (Georgia)
Ryan Park (Hawai'i)
Katie Luong (Idaho)
Anahi Anaya (Illinois)
Shamari Walker (Indiana)
Jaimie Stites (Iowa)
Brylee Aldridge (Kansas)
Grace Raber (Kentucky)
Mikell Zuvich (Louisiana)
Daniel Wortman (Maine)
Zy'Kearra Miller (Maryland)
Katelyn Malvese (Massachusetts)
Niral Patel (Michigan)
Khadar Abdi (Minnesota)
Lindsey Hill (Mississippi)
Madelyn Johnson (Missouri)
Sophia Cajune (Montana)
Saray Bedoya (Nebraska)
Jessica Diaz-Acuna (Nevada)
Catherine Boles (New Hampshire)
Chelsea Castillo (New Jersey)
Alexandro Garcia (New Mexico)
Zianna Beltran (New York)
Aaron Penny (North Carolina)
Elizabeth Fish (North Dakota)
Olivia Sexton (Ohio)
Jake Garcia (Oklahoma)
Annel Amelia Leon (Oregon)
Cindy Chau (Pennsylvania)
Nathan Katzman (Rhode Island)
Joy Bernal (South Carolina)
Zahlanii Henderson (South Dakota)
Kameron Santiago (Tennessee)
Liana Cabe (Texas)
Sage Anderson (Utah)
Ian Wallace (Vermont)
Amber Williams (Virginia)
Katie Liu (Washington)
Casey Jewell (West Virginia)
Madison Xiong (Wisconsin)
Sage Dobby (Wyoming)

K-12 Professionals (K-12 Champions)

Ina Harbison (Alabama)
Erika Schneider (Alaska)
Rocio Ruiz (Arizona)
Barbara Miller (Arkansas)
Janet Haun (California)
Conna Holley (Colorado)
Kelly O'Leary (Connecticut)
Carolyn Fox (Delaware)
Raymond Briscoe (District of Columbia)
Ugur Baslanti (Florida)
Thaddius Brown (Georgia)
Bill Spradlin (Hawai'i)
Barb Denny (Idaho)
Tricia Blackard (Illinois)
Chris Duzenbery (Indiana)
Tom Kettmann (Iowa)
Crystal Hurla (Kansas)
Anthony Zechella (Kentucky)
Brittni Carroll (Louisiana)
Natalie Gaudette (Maryland)
Allen Wang (Massachusetts)
Kayla Nichols (Michigan)
Carly Norman (Minnesota)
Montgomery Hinton (Mississippi)
Amy Brown (Missouri)
Jim Weber (Montana)
Jana Goranson (Nebraska)
Erin Been (Nevada)
William Dodge (New Hampshire)
Christina Moeller (New Jersey)
Patricia Black (New Mexico)
Melissa Morrin (New York)
Canecca Mayes (North Carolina)
Joyce Larson (North Dakota)
Tina Drake (Ohio)
Melanie Day (Oklahoma )
Tim Ray (Oregon)
Amy Keller (Pennsylvania)
Lisa Ventetuolo (Rhode Island)
Kristen Starcher (South Carolina)
Shanna Martin (South Dakota)
Kimberly Gass (Tennessee)
Steven Shoemaker (Texas)
John Tripp (Utah)
Anne Christie (Virginia)
Cathy Kerr (Washington )
Barbara Heckert (West Virginia)
Laura Buschendorf (Wisconsin)
Mary Kerns (Wyoming)

Postsecondary Professionals (Postsecondary Champions)

Lisa Smith (Alabama)
Kaitlin DeMarcus (Alaska)
Marcela Lopez (Arizona)
Amber Smith (Arkansas)
Victor Rojas (California)
Kimberly VanHoosier-Carey (Colorado)
Steven Paternoster (Connecticut)
Barika Barboza (Florida)
Corine Ackerson-Jones (Georgia )
Trevi Hardy (Idaho)
Roman Ortega Jr. (Illinois)
Claire Maxison (Indiana)
Heather Nissen (Iowa)
Dr. Alan Bearman (Kansas)
Sophia Ellis (Kentucky)
Stacy Gilbert (Louisiana)
Scott Voisine (Maine)
Althea Green (Maryland)
Gretchen Heaton (Massachusetts)
Anita Lopez Schlabach (Michigan)
Jim Miles (Mississippi)
Tameka Randle (Missouri)
Carina Beck (Montana)
Tammy Green (Nebraska)
Nicholas Mathews (Nevada)
Edem Tetteh (New Jersey)
Manuel Varela (New Mexico)
Parker Prajec (New York)
Shannon Brown (North Carolina)
Jennifer King (Ohio)
Alicia McCullar (Oklahoma)
Julie Rossi (Oregon)
Maureen Murtha (Pennsylvania)
James Ladd (South Carolina)
Debbie Toms (South Dakota)
Brian Donavant (Tennessee)
Mary Jo Parker (Texas)
Bonnie Mortensen (Utah)
Iona Black (Virginia)
Michelle Platt (Washington)
Heather Taylor (West Virginia)
Tanya Boettcher (Wisconsin)

Workforce Professionals (Workforce Champions)


Jeremy Hodge (Alabama)
Miranda Musich (Alaska)
Richard Branam (Arizona)
Ruthie Courtney (Arkansas)
Alma Salazar (California)
Walter and Valita Luckett (Connecticut)
Larré Davis (Florida)
Kathy Lindberg (Georgia)
Ron Umehira (Hawai'i)
Tyler Lenzi (Idaho)
Thomas McDermott (Indiana)
Denise Forney (Iowa)
Amanda Jerome (Kentucky)
Angie White (Louisiana)
Tom Hoff (Minnesota)
Ryan Ashley (Mississippi)
Bryan Herrick (Missouri)
Annie Chase (Montana)
Keith Station (Nebraska)
Ritika Shamdasani (North Carolina)
Tim Myers (Ohio)
Pamela Ehlers (Oklahoma)
Vonnie Mikkelsen (Oregon)
MeLinda Ammerman (South Carolina)
Monica Wepking (South Dakota)
Dan Caldwell (Tennessee)
Randy LeCompte (Texas)
Debra Crowder (Virginia)
John Glynn (Wisconsin)

Media Kits & My Success

You’ve learned about the initiative, read the list of Champions, and now you’re inspired. What now? Check out our media kits below to help spread the word about the champions in your state. Then, head on over to mysuccess.act.org to share your story of success and join a community of support and resources to promote lifelong learning. You’ll even find some champions’ stories in the mix to keep you motivated. Together, we can help more people achieve education and workplace success.


About the College and Career Readiness Campaign


The ACT College and Career Readiness Champions are high school seniors, K-12 professionals, postsecondary professionals and workforce professionals who are making a positive impact on their communities through their efforts to advance college and career readiness for all. Champions are individuals across the country who support ACT’s mission of education and workplace success. To learn more, visit www.act.org/readinesschampions

About My Success


Success is as unique as a fingerprint—and so is the journey to achieve it. The My Success campaign was created to provide a community of support, stories and resources for lifelong learning, to encourage and inspire individuals navigating their journey to find success. Join our community of support and share your story of success by using #MyStoryMySuccess or visiting mysuccess.act.org.




Follow ACT

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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

Thank you to school counselors

None of us were born knowing how to navigate from cradle to K12 to career. For guidance, we relied on family and friends, teachers and m...

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None of us were born knowing how to navigate from cradle to K12 to career. For guidance, we relied on family and friends, teachers and mentors, and often school counselors – whose many contributions are being celebrated this week, February 4 to 8, during National School Counseling Week.

Every part of the educational process is important – every part. But just as a math teacher might have a particular affinity for algebra, and a language arts teacher for literature, a school counselor’s job is to see the whole picture – and to consider how the unique circumstances, skills, and passions of each student fit into an all-encompassing navigational framework.

With most counselors working with hundreds of students, this is a daunting task, but from countless potential professions they chose this one, which means they have the mindset to help students succeed.

At ACT, we have taken the holistic perspective of counselors to heart. For the past several years we have been transforming our organization, broadening our scope to include:
  • Measurement, the expertise for which we have always been known 
  • Learning, the critical educational activity that is enhanced by excellence in measurement, and 
  • Navigation, which ACT defines as “the process of figuring out who you are, where you are, where you’re going, and how you get there.” 
This definition of Navigation lies at the heart of what school counselors help students do every single day. With tight school budgets and a society that grows ever more challenging – especially for young people – our counselors can use all the help they can get.

That’s why ACT, as a nonprofit, provides tens of millions of dollars’ worth of fee waivers each year so students can take the ACT test at no cost. School counselors play an important role supporting students who need financial help, including by encouraging them to apply for our Fee Waiver Program, which includes the registration fee for up to two ACT tests, free access to learning resources including ACT® Online Prep, ACT® Rapid Review™—All Access, and ACT® Academy™, and up to 20 regular score reports beyond those designated during registration.

As part of our transformation, in 2018 we acquired The National Research Center for College and University Admissions (NRCCUA), the nation’s largest college and career planning program for students seeking postsecondary guidance, which among its services offers the myOptions platform, which is free for students, parents, and educators.

And while 2019 is only a month old, we’ve already taken in the American College Application Campaign (ACAC) from the American Council on Education. ACAC uses independent committees in all 50 states and the District of Columbia to help more than 500,000 underserved students complete more than 800,000 college applications each year.

Young people also need role models and a community of support, which is why we’ve created the My Success campaign. Students can learn from other people’s stories as they navigate toward their own personal and professional goals.

It takes across-the-board excellence to be a great school counselor, and across the United States we are fortunate to have nearly 300,000 committed professionals who strive to meet that standard.

Many of us would not be where we are today without the support school counselors provided at some point during our lives. On behalf of the tens of millions of young people whose lives you continue to shape each year, thank you.



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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career. To learn more, visit us at act.org.


About My Success 

Success is as unique as a fingerprint—and so is the journey to achieve it. The My Success campaign was created to provide a community of support, stories and resources for lifelong learning, to encourage and inspire individuals navigating their journeys to find success. Join our community of support and share your story of success by using #MyStoryMySuccess or visiting mysuccess.act.org.


ACT, Aspiring Minds Partner to Launch ACT Stack, a Comprehensive Workforce Skills Validation Solution

Collaboration will further a shared commitment to worldwide workforce readiness and help individuals achieve workplace success IOWA CIT...

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Collaboration will further a shared commitment to worldwide workforce readiness and help individuals achieve workplace success


IOWA CITY, Iowa—ACT, Inc. and Aspiring Minds have partnered to launch ACT® Stack™, a work-readiness solution for institutions, employers and individuals around the world who need to identify and measure work readiness covering foundational, job-specific and essential skills.

ACT Stack combines a comprehensive set of foundational and job-specific skill assessments from ACT and Aspiring Minds that are designed to validate the skills necessary for success in the workplace. Together they will enable “stackable credentials” for current and prospective employees as well as students, helping companies and institutions better prepare people for jobs in the 21st century.

ACT is the nonprofit learning, measurement and navigation organization behind the ACT® test, ACT® WorkKeys®, and the ACT® National Career Readiness Certificate (NCRC®). Aspiring Minds is a global leader in talent assessments and credentialing, working with some of the world’s largest corporations to help select the right talent and with institutions and job seekers to measure and credential job readiness. Aspiring Minds’ highly scalable artificial intelligence (AI)-driven assessment and interviewing technology consistently helps organizations of all sizes take the guesswork out of hiring their ideal candidates.

ACT Stack easily enables organizations to assess their employees’ competencies and identify key skills and performance gaps. With AI-driven technology, companies can better manage the costs associated with an unsuccessful hire and hire with confidence for all types of positions and skill types.

“This collaboration is a natural fit that will benefit employers and job seekers around the world,” said Suzana Delanghe, ACT chief commercial officer. “We are very excited to be joining forces with Aspiring Minds to create ACT Stack and to build on the legacy of both organizations to improve workforce readiness and link employers with the right talent.”

“With the rapidly evolving nature of jobs, workforce readiness signals are severely underserved,” said Himanshu Aggarwal, co-founder & CEO Aspiring Minds. “We are very excited to partner with ACT to provide a comprehensive, credible and highly scalable workforce credentialing solution. Aspiring Minds’ highly scalable AI-driven assessment technology has led to its global success in helping organizations select the right talent and assess and certify job readiness.”

ACT Stack will combine ACT assessments and credentialing programs such as ACT WorkKeys and the recently launched ACT® Tessera® Workforce with Aspiring Minds’ Automata, the world’s most advanced programming assessment; SVAR, AI-powered spoken language assessments; and over 200 simulations and skill tests. This robust set of assessments will be delivered on Aspiring Minds state-of-the-art assessment and credentialing platform providing a simple yet powerful user experience.

“Our collaboration with Aspiring Minds on ACT Stack will add to the richness of our product offerings while making them available to more of our international customers in a way that is convenient to them,” said Simmy Ziv-el, ACT vice president of international markets & global business development. “Working together provides us with a great opportunity to deliver on the promise of stackable credentials, which help workers to build up their qualifications and navigate their career pathway.”

Terms of the agreement were not released.

For more information about ACT Stack, visit: www.act.org/stack.

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ACT Certified Educator Program: A Teacher Perspective

Dr. Jon Berry, Department Coordinator of World Languages at Mount Carmel High School in Chicago, shares his experience after attending t...

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Dr. Jon Berry, Department Coordinator of World Languages at Mount Carmel High School in Chicago, shares his experience after attending the ACT Certified Educator Basics training program.

Everyone involved in secondary education agrees that success on standardized college entrance exams—like the ACT® test—creates opportunities for students, opening doors into higher education and careers beyond. Regardless of how often we hear that colleges take a holistic approach to admissions, we all know that for the vast majority of students, getting into and being successful in college, depends to some extent upon their performance on college entrance exams.

We also understand how important teachers are to the process. Regardless of where we teach, who we teach, or what we teach, we understand that what we do in the classroom is essential to a student’s entrance into and preparation for college.

We also understand how difficult this is. Our jobs are not defined as “ACT Teachers,” and no classroom activity gets more criticized than “teaching to the test,” - and rightly so. Secondary education is, and should be, much more than a summative test taken several times during a student’s junior and senior year. Furthermore, it is impossible to take students who have not been exposed to a strong curriculum or who have performed poorly in whatever curriculum they have experienced, who lack a strong foundation in the language, math, and scientific reasoning skills that are assessed on the ACT test, and magically transform them into high performing ACT students through nothing more than practice tests and a crash course on fundamentals.

So the question is, and always has been: “How do I improve my students’ ACT scores and readiness for college when I am just one in a long line of instructors, when I am teaching subjects that are not specifically assessed on standardized tests, and when my own interests go deeper than the proper use of a comma or using the correct word in the correct place?”

It was with this question in mind that earlier this year I attended an ACT Certified Educator workshop in Naperville, Illinois. Although the workshop was designed for the purpose of certifying ACT tutors, I went primarily as a classroom teacher, hoping to understand better what I could do in the classroom to help my students perform better on standardized, college entrance exams and to better prepare students for college.

The workshop lasted the entire day and at the end of the day we took a test which was required for becoming an ACT Certified Educator. The workshop I attended was on basic information about the ACT test and general preparation for the test. What I learned from this workshop was extremely valuable. The presentation and the conversations served as a reminder not just of the importance of the test, but of the important role that all teachers play in student success on the ACT test and in college.

This role goes beyond preparing students for the test through a strong curriculum, sound teaching methods, practice tests and test-taking strategies. Since much of the workshop involved issues relating to the process of taking the test (registration, accommodations, emotional and physical preparation), I was reminded of how important our role is in that process.

As individuals who frequently know more about the testing experience than the students’ parents, and who have more frequent encounters with them than their school counselors, we should be willing and able to work with students as they go through the registration process. Without taking any time from our curriculum, we can easily be involved in the early stages of the students’ decision to take the test by:

  • Reminding them to sign up in a timely manner 
  • Encouraging them to seek out accommodations or fee waivers that might be available to them
  • Encouraging them to take practice tests and take advantage of the online resources (many of which cost nothing) that ACT has made available to them 
  • Reminding them to follow through: to show up for the test on time and to be academically, emotionally, and even physically prepared 
Similarly, as we teach content, we should do so with an understanding that our responsibility is not just to convey information; rather, we need to remember that we are also coaches who need to remind our students of the importance of what we are trying to accomplish in the class, that the concepts and skills we are teaching, the ideas that we are exploring, all serve a larger purpose in their lives. Preparing students for the ACT test is not necessarily the most important activity that we do for our students, but it is still an important part of the education of our students. We have the responsibility to teach our classes in such a way that our students learn skills and concepts that will help them succeed on college entrance exams.

There is still a lot for me to learn in terms of becoming a classroom teacher who better prepares students for college entrance exams. With the Certified Educator Program, ACT offers a great opportunity for helping educators better prepare their students for the ACT test, so in the end, students are more prepared and ready for success in college.

Enhance Your Teaching Credentials. Boost Your Students’ Success. Those interested in becoming an ACT Certified Educator can become certified in Basics, Writing, or subject-specific topics. Learn more.

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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Headquartered in Iowa City, Iowa, ACT is trusted as a leader in college and career readiness, providing high-quality assessments grounded in nearly 60 years of research. ACT offers a uniquely integrated set of solutions designed to provide personalized insights that help individuals succeed from elementary school through career.

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