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ACT and university

ACT and critical thinking are among the most powerful tools available to students preparing for university, helping you identify yourself as an impressive candidate and develop the intellectual habits that will help you thrive as a new undergraduate.

Here’s a guides to making the most of what ACT give you, from building a stronger personal statement to engaging confidently with the ideas that matter most in your chosen field.

1. Understand why universities value critical thinking

Universities increasingly want students who can think independently, evaluate competing claims, and engage with ideas beyond their own subject.

As the Times Higher Education Supplement notes, “universities want students who can think in the abstract.” Understanding this is the first step to using your ACT skills strategically in your application.

2. Develop your voice in ACT discussions

The best ACT students are those who have genuinely engaged in debate, had their views challenged, and adapted their thinking as a result.

Being able to describe how your perspective has evolved, and how you have contributed to the thinking of others, marks you out as a reflective, intellectually confident candidate. Pick fights in ACT classes. It is how you grow.

3. Read, watch, and engage with the world

ACT rewards curiosity and wide engagement with ideas beyond the classroom. Being able to reference books, documentaries, current events, and your own experiences signals exactly the kind of independent thinking that admissions tutors value.

Our monthly Examined Life newsletter is designed to keep you connected to the most significant issues in the world right now, giving you a constant supply of relevant, current material to draw on.

4. Write an extended project that works for you

Your extended project, whether an EPQ, HPQ, or equivalent, is your most concrete opportunity to demonstrate critical thinking to universities. Choose your topic carefully, plan your argument thoroughly, and treat it as a serious piece of intellectual work. It can become a central feature of your personal statement, giving you rich material to discuss in interviews.

Use our extended project resources at theoryofknowledge.net to help you plan, structure, and refine your response.

5. Make your ACT portfolio count

Your ACT portfolio is a collection of your best critical thinking work, demonstrating your ability to engage seriously with real-world issues and ideas across different subjects and contexts. Choose topics that matter to you, engage with them thoughtfully, and use the process to develop ideas you can talk about confidently in interviews.

The portfolio is an opportunity to demonstrate to universities that you can think critically about real-world knowledge, and that you engage seriously with the world around you. We will be adding dedicated resources to support your ACT portfolio shortly, so watch this space.

6. Connect ACT to your university subject

ACT gives you a powerful framework for thinking about any academic discipline. Whether you are applying for medicine, law, history, or computer science, the ability to reflect on how knowledge is produced, validated, and challenged in your chosen field will set you apart.

Our university preparation resource, updated every month, is specifically curated to give you a more critical understanding of your chosen subject and acquaint you with the essential issues shaping it right now.

7. Use ACT concepts in your personal statement

The 8 ACT key concepts, including evidence, perspective, power, and justification, give you a precise and sophisticated vocabulary for discussing ideas in your personal statement and interviews.

Admissions tutors are often struck by applicants who can engage with the conceptual foundations of their subject, and ACT gives you exactly the tools to do that confidently and naturally.

8. Prepare for university interviews

Many competitive universities use interviews to assess how students think under pressure. ACT is ideal preparation. The habits of mind it develops, including the ability to consider multiple perspectives, acknowledge complexity, and construct a reasoned argument, are precisely what interviewers are looking for.

Our university preparation resource includes interview guidance and subject-specific critical thinking prompts to help you practise effectively.

9. Stand out as a candidate

University applications are increasingly competitive. Students who can demonstrate genuine intellectual curiosity, awareness of significant current issues, and the ability to think critically about their own assumptions will always stand out.

Our university preparation resource connects ACT directly to real-world events and issues, helping you build the kind of application profile that makes admissions tutors sit up and take notice.

10. Thrive as a new undergraduate

The transition to university is intellectually demanding. Students who arrive already able to evaluate sources critically, construct arguments carefully, and engage with complex ideas independently are far better placed to succeed.

ACT is not just preparation for a course or qualification. It is preparation for the kind of thinking that undergraduate study requires every day, and the foundation for a lifetime of genuinely curious, critically engaged learning.

Help yourself to these samples – then join us!

Download an huge range of free sample materials, showing our innovative, compelling, and provocative approach to teaching and learning. If you like what we do, join us here. In the meantime, subscribe to our free monthly newsletter, The Examined Life, which will help you to make sense of a challenging world.