Are you taking the ACT? You're in good company! Barack Obama, Marilyn Monroe, and Steve Jobs all took the ACT, too, along with several other celebrities. We've compiled their scores so you can see how these successful people performed back when they were in high school.

We've also converted the SAT scores of famous people to the ACT scale so you get a sense of how their scores compare. Now if you ever run into Barack Obama, you'll have at least one conversation starter to fall back on...

Feature image: 1950sUnlimited/Flickr

ACT Scores of Famous People

We've gathered a complete, if perhaps not entirely accurate, list of celebrity ACT scores. These were often revealed in interviews or through investigative research. Some people were proud of their high scores, others proud of their low scores - and others couldn't care less.

Here it is:

Celebrity ACT Score College Attended Sonia Sotomayor 35 Princeton Matt Birk 34 Harvard Waka Flocka Flame 34 None Steve Jobs 32 Reed College Barack Obama 30 Columbia University Lyndon B. Johnson 26 Texas State University Marilyn Monroe 21 None

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All these people took the ACT. But many other celebrities took the SAT, and we converted their SAT scores to ACT scores:

Celebrity SAT Score ACT Conversion College Attended Paul Allen 1600 36 Washington State University Will Smith Rumored to be perfect 36 None Ben Affleck Almost perfect 35-36 Occidental College, University of Vermont Bill Gates 1590 35 Harvard Ben Bernanke 1590 35 Harvard Bill O'Reilly 1585 35 Marist College Ryan Fitzpatrick 1580 35 Harvard James Woods 1579 35 MIT Ben Stein 1573 35 Columbia Ke$ha 1500 34 None Scott McNealy 1420 32 Stanford Natalie Portman 1400+ 32-34 Harvard Al Gore 1355 30-31 Harvard Stephen King 1300s 30-31 University of Maine Meredith Vieira 1300s 30-31 Tufts University George W. Bush 1206 26-27 Yale Derek Jeter 1200 26 University of Michigan John Kerry 1190 26 Yale Courtney Cox 1150 25 Mount Vernon College Amy Tan 1100s 24-26 Linfield College, San José State University Kobe Bryant 1080 23 None Scarlett Johansson 1080 23 None Bill Clinton 1032 22 Georgetown Peyton Manning 1030 22 University of Tennessee Alex Rodriguez 910 19 None

As you can see, these famous people's ACT scores are all over the board. You can, of course, achieve great things in life even with low ACT scores, and, vice versa, excellent ACT scores are just one step on the road to success.

For most people in the world (like you and me), working hard in school, getting high grades, and going to a great college will set us up for huge opportunities.

If your goal is to get into a good college, expand your mind, and open up more opportunities by working hard in school, then your ACT scores take on greater importance. So if a highly-ranked college is in your sights, how can you join the ranks of Sonia Sotomayor, Matt Birk, and Waka Flocka Flame (a sentence that's probably never been uttered before)?

Obama attended Punahou School

in Hawaii and scored a 30 on the ACT.

How to Get Great ACT Scores

Doing well on the ACT is all about how well prepared you are. Below are some valuable strategies and resources you can use to perform your best on the ACT and add your name to the top of the list of celebrity ACT scores.

#1: Get Well Acquainted With the ACT

Do you have a best friend or family member who you know everything about, from her dream travel destination to her favorite ice cream flavor? Well, it's time to make the ACT your new best friend. Learn everything you can about the test, including what its directions say, how many questions it asks in how much time, and what content it covers in each section.

As long as you familiarize yourself with the ACT as best you can, there should be no surprises on test day. Instead, it will feel like you're sitting down with an old acquaintance - maybe one that's caused you some stress over the months, but one that you know like the back of your hand.

#2: Prep With a Plan

The ACT covers a lot of ground. Without a specific approach, you could easily get overwhelmed by the breadth of material. Setting small, manageable goals will help you divide and conquer the content.

Rather than focusing on the entire English section, for example, figure out the subskills and question types being asked within the section. Focus on just one or two of these question types at a time, and make sure you understand it fully before moving on. For more strategies on how to approach your test prep, check out our free E-Book: 5 Tips to Get You 4 Points or More.

#3: To Thine Own Self Be True

Everyone has different experiences, learning styles, and abilities. Maybe you excel in math, but analyzing a work of fiction leaves you feeling lost. To prep for the ACT effectively, you need to reflect on your strengths and weaknesses and where you need to focus your energies the most.

One way to root out your weaknesses is by answering ACT Questions of the Day. Check out this complete guide on how answering ACT QOTD can help you design your own customized study plan.

#4: Stock Up On Resources

To truly conquer the content on the ACT, you need some extra resources to help you along the way. How long is the ACT, for example? How exactly is it scored? What tips can a full 36 scorer give you on how to achieve a perfect score? We have all these answers, plus lots of helpful advice, available to you, so be sure to fully pack your mental suitcase with all the provisions you'll need to sustain yourself on test day.

What's Next?

Before you start prepping, you probably want to define your goals: what exactly are your target scores? To help you figure out what you are aiming for, we explain what's a good ACT score, what's a bad score, and what's an excellent score - and what this means for your test prep.

When do you plan to take the ACT? How many times are you taking it? We present the pros and cons of test dates and explain how smart scheduling can help you on test day.

Want to score a perfect ACT score or near it? Be like Bill Gates: read how to get a perfect ACT score, by our perfect scorer.