Read Graphs, Tables, and Diagrams
Interpretation of Data questions reward precise reading before explanation. Most misses happen when a student reads too quickly, skips a unit or legend, or imports outside science knowledge that the display never claims.
Core Idea
Start with what is shown, not what you expect. Read the title, variables, units, and scale first, then answer from the displayed evidence.
Understanding
ACT Science often gives you a graph or table plus a short experiment note, then asks for a value, a trend, a comparison, or a simple calculation.
- Read the frame first: title, axis labels, units, legend, and which condition each line or bar represents.
- Match the question to the task: are you being asked to read a value, compare conditions, estimate between points, or use the numbers in a short calculation?
- Stay inside the displayed evidence. Do not replace the graph with outside science knowledge. On this reporting category, the right answer usually comes from what is plotted or tabulated.
When two choices feel close, check whether one choice ignores a unit change, reverses the direction of a trend, or compares points from different conditions.
Worked Example
Table 1 lists plant height on Day 3: Seedling A = 9 cm and Seedling B = 7 cm. According to Table 1, which statement is supported?
Select an answer to see the explanation
Concept Guides
7Extract values from tables, charts, and diagrams accurately.
Find the exact cell, point, or label before you infer anything else.
Identify trends, maxima/minima, and relationships between variables.
Read overall direction, peaks, and lows before drawing a conclusion about the relationship.
Compare datasets across conditions and interpret differences.
Compare values at the same condition before deciding which dataset is greater or changes more.
Interpolate and extrapolate from graphed/tabulated data.
Estimate a value between measured points or beyond them using the displayed pattern.
Translate between representations (table ↔ graph) when needed.
Match the same data across tables, graphs, and diagrams without swapping variables.
Perform simple quantitative reasoning using provided data (differences, ratios, rates).
Use the data to do one short calculation, such as a difference, ratio, or rate.
Track units, scales, and axes; detect when axes are non-linear or use different scales.
Read axis labels and scale carefully, especially when tick marks are uneven or units change.