Prompt Understanding and Planning
Strong ACT Writing responses start before the first body paragraph. You need to decode the issue, understand the three provided perspectives, decide what you actually believe, and map out how you will prove it.
A rushed draft often fails not because the student cannot write, but because the student never made the assignment precise.
核心知识
Prompt understanding and planning means turning the ACT Writing task into a workable blueprint.
You should be able to answer four questions before drafting:
- What is the issue?
- What does each given perspective really argue?
- What is my own defensible position?
- How will I show how my view connects to at least one other perspective?
深入理解
What strong ACT planning actually looks like
On ACT Writing, the prompt already gives you material to argue with: an issue and three perspectives. Your job is not to invent a topic from scratch; it is to decide what the real disagreement is, choose a position you can defend, and plan how you will show its relationship to another view.
Think of the prompt as a 4-part decoding job:
- Issue: What question is this prompt really asking?
- Perspective map: What value does each perspective prioritize?
- Your claim: What do you believe, exactly?
- Relationship move: Where do you agree, qualify, or refute?
What this looks like on a real prompt
Suppose the issue is whether schools should replace many textbooks with digital materials.
- One perspective may prioritize access and efficiency: digital tools update quickly and cost less.
- Another may prioritize focus and depth: screens distract students and weaken sustained reading.
- A third may prioritize conditional use: digital materials help, but not in every class or for every student.
A useful ACT plan is not "technology has pros and cons." It is something more workable, such as: Schools should expand digital materials, but only when teachers can control distraction and still preserve deep reading for text-heavy work.
Now the essay has direction. You can explain why your view qualifies the pro-digital perspective, why it also takes a real concern from the anti-digital perspective seriously, and which examples will prove that distinction.
The point of planning is not to create a rigid template. It is to prevent vague writing. A brief plan should tell you what your claim is, what your best reasons are, which examples you can actually explain, and where your comparison with another perspective will appear.
示例解析
An ACT prompt asks whether cities should use more security cameras in public spaces. The three perspectives argue that cameras improve safety, that they threaten privacy and trust, and that limited, regulated use can balance both concerns. Which prewriting note shows the strongest understanding of the task?
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知识点教程
4Identify the issue, the three given perspectives, and the task requirements.
Decode the prompt by separating the issue, the three perspectives, and the writing task.
Choose or develop a defensible perspective and frame a clear thesis.
Choose a clear, defensible perspective that can support a real thesis.
Plan reasoning, examples, and an overall structure before drafting.
Make a short argument map with reasons, examples, and comparison points before drafting.
Analyze how your perspective relates to (agrees with, qualifies, or refutes) at least one other perspective.
Show whether your perspective agrees with, qualifies, or refutes another perspective.