Your search found 6 matches. The following is the full list of ACT testing locations in Ukraine among which you can pick one to take the exam. Please know that on the test day, test takers can use any 4-function, scientific, or graphing calculator. On the table below, you can also find all test dates through 2019.
2019-2020 ACT Test Dates in Ukraine
Test Date | Registration Deadline |
February 9, 2019 | January 11, 2019 |
April 13, 2019 | March 8, 2019 |
June 8, 2019 | May 3, 2019 |
July 13, 2019 | June 14, 2019 |
September 14, 2019 | August 16, 2019 |
October 26, 2019 | September 20, 2019 |
December 14, 2019 | November 8, 2019 |
February 8, 2020 | January 10, 2020 |
April 4, 2020 | February 28, 2020 |
June 13, 2020 | May 8, 2020 |
July 18, 2020 | June 19, 2020 |
ACT Test Centers in Ukraine
City | Center Name | Center Code |
Dnipropetrovsk | Osvista Educ Info – Advising Ctr | 870240 |
Ivano-Frankivsk | Ivano-Frankivsk International Sch | 875030 |
Kiev | Examination And Education Centre | 873430 |
Kiev | Kiev Christian Academy | 871320 |
Kyiv | Kyiv International School | 872120 |
Lviv | Lviv International American Sch | 872550 |
More about Ukraine
Population
The population is mainly composed of Ukrainians (just under 80%) and Russians (just under 20%). The minorities in Ukraine include Moldovans, Belarusians, Crimean Tatars, Bulgarians, Hungarians and Poles, each with less than 1% of the population. The proportion of Germans fell sharply in the 1990s as a result of emigration to Germany. The settlement areas of the Ukrainians and Russians are very unevenly distributed in the country; Eastern Ukraine in particular has a strong Russian character. In the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, which has been illegally annexed by Russia, Russians make up the majority population with almost two thirds.
Ukraine – The Hutsuls
The Hutsuls – a people of the Forest Carpathians
In the villages and hamlets of the Ukrainian Forest Carpathians, traditional forms of settlement and everyday cultures have survived, the bearers of which are the ethnic groups of the Bojken, Hutsulen and Lemken. The name of the respective landscape is derived from its residents: The Bojkowschtschina is located in the western part of the Forest Carpathians between the rivers San and Ush in the west and the Lomnitsa in the east. Hutsulien (the Huzulschtschina) connects to the west of the northern Bukovina and includes the upper reaches of the rivers Cheremosch, Prut and Tisza. The Lemks settle in the Polish, Slovak and Hungarian border areas southwest of the main Carpathian ridge as well as in the Polish and Slovak Beskids.
The Hutsuls in particular have retained their own distinctive cultural identity. From time immemorial they are considered to be sheep farmers, the word “Huzul” was used synonymously with shepherd. The term “Hutsulen” was also given to the breed of small, unusually strong and persistent horses from the Carpathian Mountains, which are perfectly adapted to life in the mountains. The Hutsul herdsmen and forest farmers developed over centuries from the alpine farming, the mountain pasture still largely determines the rhythm of life of the people who speak an archaic-sounding Ukrainian dialect with numerous Polish, Romanian and German loanwords. The Ukrainian shepherds, who originally settled in the foothills of the mountains, had penetrated deeper and deeper into the mountains over time, giving them more security from wars, plague, offered to the raids of the Tatars and the oppressive serfdom. Seasonal accommodation gradually turned into permanent settlements. The alpine pasture and haymaking huts, which were sometimes used by farmers from the plains, developed over time into independent mountain villages with their own living environment and associated customs. The older courtyards are fortified and resemble defensive structures that primarily offered the residents of the rough mountain forests protection from wild animals.
The highest point in the Forest Carpathians, the 2061 m high Hoverla, is a sacred mountain for the Hutsuls. They are predominantly of the Greek Catholic faith, but ancestral cults, the belief in magic, witches and demons survived well into the 20th century. Alphorn-like wind instruments, original costumes with flat hats and colorfully patterned jackets, a rich treasure trove of legends, songs, dances and festivals give the Hucul villages as a cultural landscape an independent, colorful character.
Since 1990 the number of residents has been decreasing continuously. The reasons for this are the negative natural population development and the migration losses due to emigration. The proportion of the urban population rose from 46% to 70% in 1959–2017. The average population density (2017) was 77 residents per km 2. The main settlement areas are the Donets coal basin and the Subcarpathian Mountains. Population agglomerations are also the city regions of Kiev, Dniproand Odessa. Large parts of the north (Polesia), the inner Black Sea lowlands and the Forest Carpathians are sparsely populated.
The biggest cities in Ukraine
Largest cities (inh., As of 2019) | |
Kiev (Kyiv) | 2 950 800 |
Kharkiv (Kharkov) | 1 446 100 |
Odessa | 1 013 200 |
Dnipro (until 2016 Dnipropetrovsk) | 998 100 |
Donetsk | 913 300 |