If you are a student at Highland Park High School, the ACT or SAT may already be on your radar. Between AP classes, athletics, extracurriculars, homework, and college planning, finding time for test prep during the school year can feel overwhelming.
That is why summer is such an important window.
During the summer, HPHS students often have more flexibility, fewer daily academic demands, and more time to prepare before school-year pressure returns. Once August arrives, homework, fall sports, clubs, and school routines quickly take over.
At The House Tutoring and Test Prep, we work with Highland Park High School students to build personalized ACT and SAT prep plans around their goals, schedules, and target test dates. Our location at 615 Central Ave in downtown Highland Park makes it easy for students to come in for tutoring, a free diagnostic, or a personalized prep plan.
A free ACT/SAT diagnostic is an excellent first step. It gives students a baseline score and helps determine whether the ACT or SAT may be the better fit. But during the summer, families should also think about timing, tutoring availability, and target test dates right away.
Most students benefit from 12 to 16 weeks of consistent preparation. With late-summer and fall test dates approaching quickly, now is the time to schedule the diagnostic, discuss the timeline, and reserve tutoring availability before summer schedules fill.
Schedule your free diagnostic here: Schedule a Free ACT/SAT Diagnostic
Or learn more about our Highland Park diagnostic and prep planning process here: Free ACT/SAT Diagnostic with Personalized Prep Plan
August, September, and October may sound far away, but the actual prep window is already limited.
| Test Date | Timeline |
|---|---|
| August 22 SAT | 8 weeks away — 58 days |
| September 12 SAT | 11 weeks away — 79 days |
| September 19 ACT | 12 weeks away — 86 days |
| October 3 SAT | 14 weeks away — 100 days |
| October 17 ACT | 16 weeks away — 114 days |
| November 7 SAT | 19 weeks away — 135 days |
This timeline matters because a strong prep plan takes time. A student aiming for the August SAT has only about 8 weeks. September test dates still require a plan now. October dates align more closely with a full 14 to 16-week prep window, but only if students start soon.
The diagnostic is important, but the schedule matters too. Families who wait several weeks to take the diagnostic, review the score report, and then begin thinking about tutoring may lose valuable summer prep time.
Test Dates provided by ACT.org & College Board.
Highland Park High School students are busy during the school year. Many students balance honors or AP classes, athletics, clubs, volunteering, homework, and social commitments.
Summer is not always empty. Students may still have travel, camps, jobs, sports, AP summer work, or family plans. But compared with the school year, summer usually offers more room to prepare consistently.
That flexibility allows students to:
The goal is not to cram. The goal is to use the summer strategically so students are not trying to begin the entire process once school is already back in session.
At The House, many families begin with a free ACT or SAT diagnostic. That is a smart first step because it helps answer important questions:
During the summer, we recommend scheduling the diagnostic and beginning the planning conversation right away. That way, families can discuss target test dates, summer travel, tutor availability, and prep options before the calendar gets too tight.
A strong process looks like this:
This gives students the benefit of diagnostic data without losing valuable weeks while waiting.
Schedule your student’s diagnostic here: Schedule a Free ACT/SAT Diagnostic
If you would rather talk through timing first, schedule a call here: Schedule a Test Prep Planning Call
Highland Park High School is academically rigorous. Many students come into test prep with strong foundations in math, reading, writing, and science.
That is an advantage.
The challenge is usually not whether HPHS students can learn the material. The challenge is whether they have enough time to prepare consistently, practice under timed conditions, and understand the structure of the test they are taking.
The ACT and SAT reward students who can combine academic skill with pacing, accuracy, endurance, strategy, and familiarity with the test format. A personalized prep plan helps students focus on the areas that matter most instead of spending time on generic practice.
For many students, the summer before junior year is one of the strongest times to begin.
Rising juniors should begin planning as early in the summer as possible, especially if they are considering August, September, October, or winter test dates. Starting during the summer gives them more flexibility and more time to build skills before junior-year coursework becomes demanding.
For rising juniors, the message is simple: the earlier you start, the more options you have.
Many rising sophomores may benefit from beginning the process during the summer, especially if they are academically ready, want early exposure to the ACT or SAT, or would benefit from a lower-pressure timeline.
Sophomore summer is not always the time for intensive prep, but it can be an excellent time to take a diagnostic, understand the testing landscape, and determine whether early prep makes sense.
Learn more about test prep for rising sophomores here: ACT/SAT Prep for Rising Sophomores
Seniors who still want to improve their ACT or SAT scores may benefit from highly targeted tutoring. At this stage, the focus is usually on the sections where the student can make the most efficient gains before application deadlines.
Some students are better suited for the ACT. Others are better suited for the SAT. The best way to decide is not to guess.
The ACT includes English, Math, Reading, and Science. It tends to reward students who can move quickly, manage time well, and handle a broad range of question types across a tight testing schedule.
The SAT has a different structure, pacing, and question style. For some students, the SAT feels more manageable. For others, the ACT is the stronger path.
A diagnostic helps determine which test gives the student the better starting point and the clearest path forward. Sometimes just starting with an SAT diagnostic will be enough to decide whether to move forward with SAT prep or ACT Prep.
The House takes a personalized approach to ACT and SAT prep. Every student begins with a diagnostic exam or score review so we can identify strengths, weaknesses, and opportunities for improvement.
From there, we build a prep plan around the student’s:
The House offers targeted ACT and SAT tutoring based on each student’s needs. Some students need math support. Others need reading pacing, grammar strategy, science practice, or full-test endurance.
The plan depends on the student.
Full-length practice tests are an important part of test prep. They help students build stamina, understand pacing, and see how they perform under realistic conditions.
After practice tests, The House reviews score patterns and adjusts the plan so students can use their prep time more efficiently.
Summer schedules can be complicated. Students may have camps, travel, jobs, sports, or family commitments.
The House can help families build a prep schedule around those plans. Sessions may be scheduled in person at our Highland Park location or online when needed.
The key is to reserve tutoring time early, before summer availability becomes limited.
Even strong students can lose time or momentum if they approach test prep without a plan.
Families often schedule a diagnostic and assume they will decide what to do afterward. During the summer, that delay can cost valuable prep time.
The ACT and SAT are timed tests. Students need to practice pacing, not just content.
Content knowledge matters, but strategy matters too. Students need to know how to manage time, when to move on, and how to approach different question types.
Short bursts of prep can help, but most students benefit from consistent practice over time. A thoughtful plan allows skills to build gradually.
Parents can help by making the process easier to manage.
The most helpful steps are:
The goal is to create structure without adding unnecessary pressure.
Summer goes quickly.
If your student is planning to take the ACT or SAT this year, now is the time to schedule a diagnostic, discuss the timeline, and reserve tutoring availability before schedules fill.
The House helps Highland Park High School students prepare with personalized tutoring, flexible scheduling, free diagnostics, and a convenient downtown Highland Park location.
Start here:
Schedule a free ACT/SAT diagnostic: Schedule a Free Diagnostic
Learn more about the Highland Park diagnostic and personalized prep plan: Free ACT/SAT Diagnostic with Personalized Prep Plan
Learn more about ACT/SAT prep for rising sophomores: ACT/SAT Prep for Rising Sophomores
Schedule a call to talk through your student’s timeline: Schedule a Test Prep Planning Call
Summer gives HPHS students more flexibility, fewer school-year distractions, and more time to prepare before homework, AP classes, athletics, and extracurriculars return.
Most students benefit from 12 to 16 weeks of consistent preparation. The exact timeline depends on the student’s starting score, target score, test date, schedule, and whether the student is preparing for the ACT, SAT, or both.
Yes. A diagnostic is one of the best ways to identify a student’s baseline score and determine which test may be the better fit. During the summer, families should also begin discussing timeline and tutor availability right away.
Yes. In many cases, families can begin discussing the prep schedule before the diagnostic is completed. The diagnostic should still happen before or early in the prep process so the plan can be personalized.
It can be, depending on the student. Some rising sophomores benefit from taking a diagnostic, learning about the ACT and SAT, and beginning the process with less pressure.
Learn more here: ACT/SAT Prep for Rising Sophomores
Yes. The House offers personalized one-on-one ACT and SAT tutoring tailored to each student’s goals, score report, timeline, and schedule.
The House is located at 615 Central Ave in downtown Highland Park. The location is convenient for Highland Park High School students and families throughout the North Shore.
The House is an independent tutoring and test prep center. We are not officially affiliated with Highland Park High School or the school district. However, our tutors have extensive experience working with HPHS students and understand the academic demands common among North Shore students.
The best first step is to schedule a free ACT/SAT diagnostic and begin discussing your student’s timeline right away.
Schedule your diagnostic here: Schedule a Free ACT/SAT Diagnostic
Or schedule a call here: Schedule a Test Prep Planning Call