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Frequently Asked Questions

Browse our help topics to learn more about Acely

General Information

Acely a website accessible on desktop and mobile. .

Yes! Acely offers 7,500+ SAT® practice questions plus 25 full-length adaptive SAT practice tests. The test content and features are based on the CollegeBoard’s Bluebook digital SAT test.

Acely also offers 2,800+ PSAT questions, 10 full-length PSAT practice tests, 4,200+ Acely questions for the ACT® test, and question banks for AP Biology, AP English Literature, AP World History, AP US History, AP Pre Calculus, AP Calculus AB and AP Calculus BC.

Acely has 7,500+ SAT® questions, 4,200+ Acely questions for the ACT® test and 2,800+ Acely questions for the PSAT® test. All human-verified. There are sections devoted to SAT® Math, SAT® Reading and Writing, ACT® Math, ACT® Science, ACT® English, and ACT® Reading. Within each subject, there are categories so students can focus on the specific topic they need help with.

We currently offer AP Biology, AP English Literature, AP World History, AP US History, AP Pre Calculus, AP Calculus AB and AP Calculus BC. We are always adding exciting new content, so keep an eye out for updates!

We built a system that interfaces with foundational LLMs (large language models) to facilitate conversations between the user and the Acely bot. We can plug various generative AI models into this system and rapidly experiment to evaluate which foundation model can deliver the most helpful, conversational, and natural-sounding study buddy for users. Hints are generated by AI and answer explanations are augmented by AI.

Yes! Acely is a great tool that offers 7,500+ SAT practice questions, answers explanations, and hints, 25 full-lenth adaptive SAT practice tests, projected scores, and more. The AI bot guarantees you’ll never get stuck wondering why you got a problem wrong again!

100%. In fact, we recommend using Acely in addition to other resources like the Bluebook App (for full digital SAT tests) and Khan Academy (to learn new concepts). Our testing app provides more opportunities for digital testing with all the Bluebook features, like “mark for review” and “answer elimination.”

Very effective! We guarantee that your official SAT score after studying with Acely will increase by 200 points and if it doesn’t, we will refund your subscription*

*Please see our terms and conditions

For a given question we “show” the model additional information pertaining to the question. This results in higher quality, more specific, more relevant responses and reduces the risk of the model veering off in its response. This data will also be collected and used to improve the efficacy of responses and improve our ability to generate content. Additionally, all questions and answers within our question bank are human-verified to ensure accuracy.

Our content is handcrafted by the Acely curriculum team, which is assisted by Acely’s AI workflows. The curriculum team consists of educators and test prep experts who have experience building questions for multiple standardized tests, including the SAT® and ACT®.

All questions, answers, hints and explanations are reviewed and verified by our team to ensure they meet College Board standards in terms of topics, accuracy, difficulty, and structure.

Acely is completely student-paced, meaning they determine how much to use it. Since students have 24/7 access, they can determine a specified number of minutes a day to study. Acely’s system learns from users’ interactions with practice questions and the Acely bot. Over time it can make personalized recommendations of questions targeted to a student’s proficiency level and goals, provide predictive scores, and tailor its persona to resonate with the particular student to accelerate their learning.

Yes! Acely’s practice tests will not time out even if students go over time, so students can continue working up to their allotted time. Students’ projected Acely scores will not be affected if students use extra time, so the score ranges are still an accurate representation of their progress. Additionally, after students submit their test, they’ll be able to see how much time they spent in total and on each question, so they can compare this with how much allotted time they would have on test day.

Account Setup

  1. Click the “Start Your Free Trial” button to sign up for a 3-day free trial.
  2. Enter your first name and email address, or select “Continue with Google” (please note, this email address cannot be updated or changed after subscribing).
  3. Click the link within the subsequent verification email sent (Acely accounts are email-verified so there is no need to set a password).
  4. Choose your Pro plan (1,3,6, or 12 months).
  5. Complete the checkout with a credit card (to prevent spam and/or duplicate sign ups).
  6. Add on our AP plan if you'd like.
  7. Start studying!

Current Juni Learning families can use the same email as their existing account or a different email, as the two platforms aren’t linked.

Acely access is directly linked to the email account entered and verified during the sign-up process, so we are unable to change that information. If you no longer have access to the email account used to sign up, please contact our team at [email protected] so we can assist further.

Acely is connected to the email address used to create an account (no password needed!), so simply navigate from any browser to acely.ai and click “Login”. You have the option to either enter your email address or “Continue with Google”.

Billing & Payments

Students can use Acely for free with limited features after the 3-day free trial (which requires a credit card to prevent spam and duplicate sign ups).

The free tier gives students access to the question bank without hints or explanations. For a more personalized and beneficial experience, we recommend upgrading to one of our Pro Plans to get hints, performance dashboards, full-length practice tests, hard questions, projected scores, and more.

Acely requires a credit card before starting the 3 day (72 hour) free trial so that we can verify student and parent identities and prevent spam and/or duplicate sign ups.

Users can immediately cancel their Pro subscription in their account and then keep access to Pro features for the duration of the trial. Once the trial ends, their access will switch to our “limited tier” plan which provides free access to the questions banks, without hints, explanations, practice tests or other Pro features.

You have 3 days (72 hours) from the time of sign-up to access Acely fully for free. After 3 days (72 hours), you’ll be automatically downgraded to our “limited free version” unless you add your billing information. With the limited free version, users lose access to projected scores, answer explanations, diagnostic tests, the Study Plan, and hints.

You can add your billing information at any time, to subscribe to one of our available Pro Plans and retain access to all of the Acely features.

From the webpage view, click on the name displayed at the bottom, left-hand side of the page. From mobile, click on the 3 horizontal lines at the top, left-hand side of the page, then click on the name displayed at the bottom, left-hand side of the screen.

Click on “Manage Subscription” and expand the menu to view details of the next invoice, which includes the next bill date and any discounts.

We accept all valid VISA, Mastercard, Discover, and American Express credit and debit cards.

There are three Pro (paid) plans.

Acely SAT gives students access to:

  • 7,500+ SAT questions, 2,800+ PSAT questions
  • 25 full-length SAT practice tests and 10 full-length PSAT practice tests
  • Performance Dashboard
  • Review and correct mistakes
  • Hints & explanations powered by AI
  • Similar question and difficulty selector
  • Personalized SAT study plan
  • Projected Scores

Acely ACT gives students access to:

  • 4,200+ Acely questions for the ACT® test
  • 10 10 full-length exams to prepare for the ACT®
  • Performance Dashboard
  • Review and correct mistakes
  • Hints & explanations powered by AI
  • Projected Scores

Acely SAT + ACT gives students access to all of the above!



Pricing varies based on subscription length and plan. Please see our pricing page for details.

All subscriptions are billed on the calendar day immediately following the 3-day (72-hour) trial period, and auto-renew on the same date at the selected incremental frequency (1-month, 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month) until canceled.

Please note you may cancel at any time, but there are no partial or pro-rated refunds issued for cancellations. See “What is your cancellation/refund policy?” for more details.


All subscriptions are billed on the calendar day immediately following the 3-day (72 hour) trial period, and auto-renew on the same date at the selected incremental frequency (1-month, 3-month, or 6-month) until canceled.

Please note you may cancel at any time, but there are no partial or pro-rated refunds issued for cancellations. See “What is your cancellation/refund policy?” for more details.

Acely AP can be purchased as an add-on, once you sign up for an Acely Pro free trial! Once you start your free trial, you can then add on a free trial of AP courses and you are able to cancel either product before your bill date! You can also cancel just one while keeping the other subscription active.

Pricing varies based on subscription length and plan. Please see our AP Prep page for details.


Yes, Acely subscriptions renew automatically using the payment details on file for your account. Until you cancel, we bill in advance for each subscription interval selected (1, 3, 6, or 12 months) and on the same date of the subsequent month as the date of the initial payment. You may cancel your subscription at any time as described in the “Cancelation and Refund Policy” section of these terms.

Yes! We offer a $50 credit to your account for each friend you refer and your friend receives $50 off their first payment! Once you log into your Acely account, click on your name at the bottom, left-hand side of the page to access your account details.

On the website: next to the “Give $50, get $50” message at the top of the page, simply click “Create Link” and you'll be provided with a link to send directly to anyone you’d like to refer. From mobile, under “Share Invite Link”, simply copy the link to share with a friend.

Additional referral program details are included here

Pro Plans are purchased for a specific period (1-month, 3-month, 6-month, 12-month), with discounts factored in for the 3, 6, and 12-month plans, so if you choose to purchase a different plan, the downgrade will take place at the end of the existing prepaid subscription period. Please contact us at [email protected] with any questions.

You may cancel your Acely subscription at any time; however, there are no partial or prorated refunds issued for cancellations. To avoid charges to the payment information on file for the upcoming billing period, you must cancel your subscription at least one (1) business day prior to the next bill date. For our team to begin to process a cancellation, we require that customers complete the steps below:

  1. Login to https://app.acely.ai and navigate to https://app.acely.ai/account under your user profile.
  2. On this page, find the Manage Billing session and follow the prompts to cancel.
  3. Please note that your cancellation request may take up to 3 business days to reflect in your account once submitted, and you will receive a confirmation email from [email protected] once the cancellation is fully processed.

Yes! If your official SAT score after studying with Acely does not show an increase by 200 points or your official ACT score after studying with Acely does not show an increase of 5 points from your starting score, we will refund your subscription*
*Please see our terms and conditions for more information.

Getting the Most Out of Acely

Diagnostic Mode is a timed practice containing a sampling of questions for the Digital SAT® (DSAT) or ACT®. The Acely diagnostic test for SAT contains 10 Reading and 10 Math questions. The Acely diagnostic test for ACT contains 10 questions in each of the ACT test subjects: Math, Reading, Science, and English.

Diagnostic Mode mimics the experience of a real exam, providing access to both a raw score (how many questions were answered correctly out of the total number of questions for each subject) and projected score, which is an approximation based on the raw score and SAT or ACT guidance data.

For each answer that was incorrect during the Diagnostic Mode, students are able to open the question in Practice Mode, which offers the ability to practice similar questions and request hints.

Practice Mode allows you to explore your exam page and practice exam subject areas. You can sort practice questions by topic as well as difficulty (Easy, Medium, and Hard), so you can specifically work on the topics you may struggle with.

From the main Acely dashboard, click on Performance for the overview of test results. By clicking on either “Performance”, you will be able to view previous scores from other test attempts, the Projected Score, overall accuracy and the areas that were the strongest and weakest overall. From here, students can focus their practice on any areas of weakness until those become strengths.

From the main Acely dashboard, click on Performance for the overview of test results. By clicking on either “Performance”, you will be able to view previous scores from other test attempts, the Projected Score, overall accuracy and the areas that were the strongest and weakest overall. From here, students can focus their practice on any areas of weakness until those become strengths.

It’s recommended to take 2-3 practice exams when you first begin studying for the SAT or ACT as this will help identify any problem areas early on. Generally, we suggest taking at least 4 practice exams before the actual exam, but students can practice as often as they’d like!

Access the difficulty setting on the right side of the New Question button in the bottom, right of your screen. You have the option to select “Easy”, “Medium” or “Hard” questions.

To fix a mistake, select the correct answer without using any hints or help and before selecting any incorrect answer(s). If you don’t get it on the first try, you can easily attempt the question again by clicking “Clear Chat” before selecting your answer.

Yes!

  • Join our Discord - this is where students help each other with questions, send test motivation and more!
  • Subscribe to The Acely Edge (our weekly newsletter) which includes tips and tricks for college readiness, plus cram week announcements, app updates and more!
  • Follow @junistudytips on Instagram and TikTok for college admissions tips from current Ivy League students!
  • Follow @acely_ai on Instagram and TikTok for study tips and just fun relatable trending content!

We recommend downloading the Acely SAT Math Cheat Sheet, or ACT Math Cheat Sheet containing all the math formulas students will need to prepare for their upcoming exams.

Yes! You can find this information and more in our Acely blog. For more information specifically on the conversion tables, click this link.

Still can’t find what you’re looking for? Contact Us

Acely for SAT® Prep

Yes! In fact, starting in March of 2024, the College Board now only offers a digital test, no more paper! Read more here about this decision.

There are many changes including:

  • The Digital SAT is shorter than the paper SAT. The paper SAT used to take 3 hours and 15 minutes to complete, and the DSAT will take 2 hours and 14 minutes to complete.
  • There are shorter reading passages, and only one question per passage on the Digital SAT. On the paper SAT, there used to be multiple questions related to one long passage.
  • The Digital SAT is adaptive. So depending how you perform on the first Reading & Writing and Math modules, your second modules for each section may be easier or harder.
  • Unlike the paper SAT, on the Digital SAT you will have access to a calculator on the entire math section. You can practice using the Desmos online graphing calculator here.

The Digital version of the SAT is an hour shorter, so many students feel that that makes the test easier overall. However, the Digital SAT is also an adaptive test, so depending on how you do on the first modules, the second may be much more difficult. This could lead students to feel that the overall test is harder. Ultimately it depends on the student!

You are able to review missed questions in the “Mistakes” view. Navigate to the SAT view from the menu bar, then click “Review All Mistakes”. You can also use this direct link.

Within this view, the areas with the highest number of missed questions are shown at the top, simply select a target area to review.

To fix a mistake, select the correct answer without using any hints or help and before selecting any incorrect answer(s). If you don’t get it on the first try, you can easily attempt the question again by clicking “Clear Chat” before selecting your answer.

Because the SAT is run by the College Board, the College Board's own practice tests through the Bluebook app will be most representative of the actual test. However, there are only six practice tests available through Bluebook. So once you've done those, or if you're trying to save those, use adaptive tests like Acely's where you can then study your missed questions after and ask the AI bot why you got them wrong.

These questions are designed to prepare you for the Digital SAT. They are similar in domain, structure, and difficulty to questions you’re likely to see on test day.

Each of the six Bluebook exams has a similar overall difficulty. In the first module of both Reading & Writing and Math, there is a mixture of easy, medium and difficult questions. Depending how you do on the first module, the second module could have mostly easy and medium or mostly medium and hard questions.

Some students have reported that the Bluebook practice tests 4 - 6 are more in line with the difficulty of the official exam and are more difficult than practice tests 1 - 3 (this is not verified information and is based on anecdotal reports by high schoolers in Reddit and Discord communities).

With the DSAT Study Plan, use the baseline scores from the diagnostic test to make a plan to help you reach your goals. Simply enter your test date, select a goal score, and you can view your entire plan which indicates the number of full-length exams, practice questions, and review of missed questions needed to improve your score.

Select the option next to “Your Study Plan” to view your plan week by week for more manageable targets. Update your plan at any time as your performance improves!

Use Acely’s Study Planner tool to input your baseline score (most recent practice or official SAT score), your target score and your test date.

The tool will then tell you how to break up your weekly studying into tangible tasks, including practice questions and full-length practice tests.

Yes! Acely offers 7,500+ SAT practice questions plus 25 SAT practice tests. The test content and features are based on the CollegeBoard’s Bluebook digital SAT test.

  • Adaptive modules: Students who get more questions right in the first math and reading and writing modules will receive harder questions in the second module.
  • Built-in calculator: A big shift of the digital SAT is the ability to use Desmos, a built-in graphing calculator on the whole math section. Students can practice this through Acely.
  • Mark for review tool: Students can mark questions they’re uncertain about and then review them at the end of the module.
  • Answer elimination: Students can cross out answer choices to narrow down decisions.
  • Timer: Students can show or hide the countdown timer. At the end, students can see how much time they spent on each question and if they went over the allotted total time.
  • Projected scores: Students can see what their projected score is at the end based on the number of questions answered correctly in each module.

The best way to study is by finding a personalized study plan that works for your strengths and weaknesses.

Acely helps students create this using the Study Planner tool that takes into account their practice scores, target scores and test date. Then through full-length practice tests and practice questions, you can see your progress over time.

Students can ask the AI chat bot why they got a question wrong to make sure they’re learning from their mistakes. Students can also see which topics and subtopics are their strongest and weakest so they know which sections to focus on.

This all depends on your baseline score, your target score and your test date. To see the most improvement, we recommend studying for at least 3 months for at least 10 hours per week. This can help students boost their score by ~100 points.

With 20 hours of studying per week for 3 months, students can boost their score by more than 150 points. Again, this greatly depends on their starting score.

  1. Take a full-length, timed practice test to understand your baseline score.
  2. Now determine your target score based on college applications, scholarships etc. What is the difference between those two scores?
  3. To improve your score 10-100 points, you’ll need to study for at least 20 hours. To improve your score 100-150 points, you’ll need at least 40 hours of studying. To improve your score 150-200 points, you’ll need 80 hours of studying. And to improve your score more than 200 points you’ll need around 150 hours of studying.
  4. Now that you know how many hours of studying you’ll need, look at upcoming SAT test dates and find a date that will give you enough time to adequately prepare.
  5. Use Acely’s Study Planner to figure out just how to spend those hours studying.

Once you sign up for an Acely free trial, you can practice with our SAT practice question bank that has 7,500+ SAT questions! The College Board also has a great question bank to reference, though you won’t have the help of Acely’s AI bot for explanations and hints, or the tracking of your strongest and weakest areas.

The Digital SAT is split into two sections. The first section is 64 minutes of Reading & Writing and is broken into two modules, both 32 minutes. Depending on how you do on the first module, your second will be easier or harder since the test is adaptive. You will then have a 10 minute break before a 70 minute math section, broken into two math modules, each 35 minutes with 22 questions. Same as the R&W, the Math section is adaptive.

Reading & Writing consists of: Craft and Structure, Expression of Ideas, Information and Ideas, and Standard English Conventions.

Math consists of: Algebra, Problem Solving and Data Analysis, Geometry and Trigonometry, and Advanced Math.

If you do not turn in your test at all, correct, you can get a 0. However, if you get every question wrong, you will still get a 400 because the Math and Reading & Writing sections are on a scale of 200-800 points. The highest score you can get is a 1600.

Due to the timed nature, yes the SAT is a difficult test. However, the digital SAT is shorter than the paper version. The ACT is also a timed test, so depending on the student may be harder or easier. With Acely, you can understand your strongest and weakest areas for both tests to help improve your score.

  1. Start prepping early! A 1600 is an achievable, but also tough SAT score to achieve! So make sure to give yourself plenty of time to study.
  2. Use Acely’s Study Planner to figure out how to spend each week leading up to your test date.
  3. Learn from your mistakes! Use Acely’s missed question page to practice questions you missed and ask the AI chat for thorough explanations.
  4. Dive deeper into your weakest areas. Acely shows you your strongest and weakest areas that way you can maximize your studying time.
  5. Make sure to take all of the College Board official Bluebook practice tests in addition to Acely’s practice tests.

Not necessarily. It depends on the test’s difficulty and how the raw scores translate to scaled scores. It’s possible you could get 1 question wrong per section and still get a 1600. But again, it really depends per test because the SAT is an “equated” test. This means that raw scores are revised up or down depending on the difficulty of the test.

It depends on the test since the SAT is equated, so the raw scores are scaled based on the difficulty of the test.However, because there are fewer questions on the digital SAT, to get a 1500+ score you most likely can get 4-5 total questions wrong. But it also depends on the difficulty of the question you get wrong. Getting an easy question wrong (first module), will penalize you more. So make sure you don’t make any silly mistakes on easy questions!

The Math section consists of four topics: Algebra, Problem Solving and Data Analysis, Geometry and Trigonometry, and Advanced Math. All of these topics are ones students cover in their typical high school math classes. You shouldn’t have to learn anything new, just reinforce concepts that are harder for you.

The whole math section is 70 minutes, broken into two modules, each 35 minutes with 22 questions. The Digital SAT is adaptive, meaning the first module is easier, and the second section could be easier or harder depending on how you do on the first. This adaptive nature is the same for the Reading & Writing and Math sections.

The Math section consists of four topics: Algebra (13-15 questions), Problem Solving and Data Analysis (5-7 questions), Geometry and Trigonometry (5-7 questions), and Advanced Math (13-15 questions).

On average you can miss around 7-8 questions on the Math section to get a 700. However, this depends which questions you get wrong. Getting easier questions wrong (generally first module) will penalize you more. Also, this depends on the test’s difficulty and how the raw scores translate to scaled scores.

Make sure you bring a device to take the test on, either a laptop or tablet. You can also use school-managed Chromebooks. Like the paper SAT, we still recommend you bring paper and a pencil for scratch work. You can also bring a calculator, although you will have access to Demos, the online graphing calculator, for the entire math section.

ACT® Prep

Yes! Acely is a great tool that offers 4,200+ Acely questions for the ACT® test, answer explanations, and hints. The AI bot guarantees you’ll never get stuck wondering why you got a problem wrong again!

The ACT consists of three sections: English, Math, Reading, plus an optional Science section and an optional Writing section. The ACT is scored on a scale of 1 to 36 for each section. The composite score is the average of the three section scores (English, Math, and Reading), with the optional Science and Writing scores reported separately. Learn more about scoring here.

We recommend finding the tool that works best for your learning style. Starting in September 2025, all paper and digital ACT exams will use the Enhanced version. For students preparing for the Enhanced ACT, Acely is a great tool to help get ready for test day. Acely includes the optional Science section as well as the other changes in Math, Reading, and English. Acely also offers live ACT study sessions hosted by fellow high schoolers.


The ACT is offered as both a digital and paper test. Learn more about the online test here.

Be sure to study content from each section by taking practice tests and using Acely, which offers personalized practice and instant answers, explanations, and hints. We suggest using other resources such as the official ACT website and Kaplan in addition to Acely.


The new enhanced ACT consists of the three ACT Core multiple-choice tests in English, Math, Reading, one optional multiple-choice test in Science, and one optional Writing essay. The ACT Core is 125 minutes long (35 minutes English, 40 minutes Reading, and 50 minutes Math). The optional Science and Writing sections are each an additional 40 minutes. Learn more about the Enhanced ACT here.

The ACT writing portion is optional, but some colleges and school districts may require it. Be sure to check the requirements for the schools you are planning to apply to.


The Science portion is optional, but some colleges and school districts may require it. Be sure to check the requirements for the schools you are planning to apply to.

You will have 35 minutes to answer 50 English questions, 50 minutes to answer 45 Math questions, 40 minutes to answer 36 Reading questions, plus an optional 40 minutes to answer 40 Science questions and 40 minutes to complete 1 writing prompt. You can learn more about the different sections here.

We suggest that you start test preparation in your sophomore year of high school in order to start building the necessary skills and knowledge required for the ACT. By taking the ACT in your sophomore year, you can identify areas of improvement early on and begin to build your confidence.

It depends on your goals, but generally yes! Studying at least three months before you plan on taking the ACT is a good start. If you want to improve by more than 10 points, at least 6 months of prep time is suggested. This ample prep time allows you to spread your studying evenly over time and dedicate yourself to taking multiple practice tests.

PSAT® Prep

College Board & Acely combined! You get access to 10 full-length practice tests with Acely and 1 on Bluebook and 2,800+ practice questions on Acely. Acely will also provide projected scores and a performance dashboard to track your progress.

Students should use the official College Board PSAT Bluebook practice test as well as Acely’s 10 full-length practice tests to make sure they are getting consistent practice. They can see their projected scores on both, and with Acely’s dashboard, they can see their strengths and weaknesses so they know how to target their practice. After that, students should consistently use Acely’s practice question bank to work on their weakest topics.

There are a few different PSAT tests students can take.

  1. PSAT 8/9: For 8th and 9th graders, administered throughout the school year. Shorter and less complex than the PSAT/NMSQT.
  2. PSAT 10: Taken in the spring of sophomore year. Identical to the PSAT/NMSQT but doesn't qualify for National Merit Scholarships.
  3. PSAT/NMSQT: Taken in the fall of junior year. Identical to the PSAT 10 but can qualify you for National Merit Scholarships.

The PSAT 8/9 and 10 are good markers of baseline scores. Once a student takes these, they know how much preparation they want to do for a certain goal PSAT score. Students should spend the summer before junior year preparing so they’re ready to take the official PSAT/NMSQT in the fall of junior year (this one qualifies for National Merit Scholarships).

The PSAT is a great test to take for a few reasons.

  1. SAT Score Prediction: The PSAT gives a good indication of your future SAT score, helping you gauge progress and identify strengths and weaknesses.
  2. Targeted Practice: It highlights areas needing improvement, making SAT preparation more effective. Even 20 hours of targeted practice can significantly boost your SAT score.
  3. Scholarship Opportunities: High PSAT scores can qualify for National Merit Scholarships and other awards. Opt into the Student Search Service for more scholarship opportunities.
  4. School Requirements: Many high schools require the PSAT, often covering the cost. Check with your guidance counselor for specifics.

No, they don’t. However, many schools and corporations (including the National Merit Scholarship) provide scholarships to students who receive high scores on the PSAT.

Yes! Here are a few of the reasons why:

  1. SAT Score Prediction: The PSAT gives a good indication of your future SAT score, helping you gauge progress and identify strengths and weaknesses.
  2. Targeted Practice: It highlights areas needing improvement, making SAT preparation more effective. Even 20 hours of targeted practice can significantly boost your SAT score.
  3. Scholarship Opportunities: High PSAT scores can qualify for National Merit Scholarships and other awards. Opt into the Student Search Service for more scholarship opportunities.
  4. School Requirements: Many high schools require the PSAT, often covering the cost. Check with your guidance counselor for specifics.

Acely offers 2,800+ PSAT practice questions.

Acely offers 10 full-length, adaptive PSAT practice tests.

AP® (Advanced Placement) Prep

AP Biology, AP Calculus, AP Pre Calculus, AP English Literature, AP World History, and AP US History with more on the way!

Yes! We have practice questions and practice tests for the MCQ (multiple choice section) of the AP exams. We do not support FRQs at this time.

Advanced Placement tests are college-level exams on specific subjects. Students can take AP exams every May, following completion of a school or online course. AP exams may give students college credit, depending on the college.

We built a system that interfaces with foundational LLMs to facilitate conversations between the user and the Acely bot. We can plug in various generative AI models to this system and rapidly experiment in order to evaluate which foundation model can deliver the most helpful, conversational, and natural-sounding study buddy for users. Hints are generated by AI and answer explanations are augmented by AI.

For a given question we “show” the model additional information pertaining to the question. This results in higher quality, more specific, more relevant responses and reduces the risk of the model veering off in its response. This data will also be collected and used to improve the efficacy of responses and improve our ability to generate content. Additionally, all questions and answers are human-verified to ensure accuracy.

Acely AP is completely student-paced, meaning they determine how much to use it. Since it’s available 24/7, users can determine a certain number of minutes a day to study. Acely’s system learns from users’ interactions with practice questions and with the Acely bot. Over time it can make personalized recommendations of questions targeted to a student’s proficiency level and goals, provide predictive scores, and tailor its persona to resonate with the particular student to accelerate their learning.

Still can’t find what you’re looking for? 

Ask a question and one of our advisors will get back to you with an answer.

Desmos Shortcuts

By typing in these shortcuts, you’ll get the indicated feature.

shift + 6: exponent

sqrt: square root

cbrt: cubed root

nthroot: “nth” root

table: creates a table to add points

pi: adds the pi value

frac: creates an empty fraction

< = : ≤

shift + \: absolute value symbol