How can QuantHub for Education prepare students for standardized assessments like ACT and SAT?

Assessments are increasingly including more material directed toward data interpretation and informational text comprehension. QuantHub can help!

Students learn in QuantHub through data interpretation and informational text reading. Help your students become college and career-ready by assigning skills aligned with ACT college and career-ready standards. 

Use the Lesson Plans tool to explore standards and skills. 

Use this quick link guide to find all aligned skills and their assignment links. 

SAT Alignment 


The SAT Math Assessment consists of four main components: Algebra, Advanced Math, Problem-Solving and Data Analysis, as well as Geometry and Trigonometry.

While QuantHub questions are not written following SAT's standards of question writing, the concepts taught by QuantHub pertaining to statistics and data analysis can support preparation for SAT Math. 

QuantHub can help students prepare for the specific component and standard outlined in the SAT Math Assessment, focusing on problem-solving and data analysis skills.

Problem-Solving and

Data Analysis

Students will apply quantitative reasoning about ratios, rates, and proportional relationships; understand and apply unitrate; and analyze and interpret one- and two-variable data.
  • Ratios, rates, proportional relationships, and units;
  • Percentages, 1-variable data: distributions and measures of center and spread;
  • 2-variable data: models and scatterplots;
  • Probability and conditional probability;
  • Inference from sample statistics and margin of error;
  • Evaluating statistical claims: observational studies and experiments

Additionally, QuantHub provides many opportunities to build reading comprehension and informational graphic interpretation skills. See the following standard this supports: 

Information and Ideas Students will use comprehension, analysis, and reasoning skills and knowledge as well as what's stated and implied in texts (including in any accompanying informational graphics) to locate, interpret, evaluate, and integrate information and ideas.
  • Central Ideas and Details;
  • Command of Evidence (Textual, Quantitative);
  • Inferences