ACT Test Centers and Dates in Austria

Your search found 3 matches. The following is the full list of ACT testing locations in Austria 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.

ACT Testing Locations in Austria

2019-2020 ACT Test Dates in Austria

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 Austria

City Center Name Center Code
St Gilgen St Gilgen International School 871150
Vienna INTL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OF VIENNA 870720
Vienna Ossiri’s Lernakademie 871110

ACT Test Centers and Dates in Austria

More about Austria

Population

Austrian society is relatively homogeneous; around 89% of the population are German-speaking. The recognized national minorities include Slovenes, who mainly live in Carinthia, Croats, Hungarians and Roma, especially in Burgenland, and Czechs and Slovaks in Vienna and Lower Austria. The special rights of minorities are regulated in Article 7 of the State Treaty, in the Ethnic Groups Act of 1976 and in various state laws (official language, topographical inscriptions, school system). The proportion of foreigners is 15.3% (2017) (1988: 4.3%). The majority of people with foreign citizenship come from Germany (proportion of the number of foreigners in 2017: 13.5%), Turkey (8.7%) and Serbia (8.8%). At the end of 2017, a total of 172 600 refugees were living in Austria.

The population of Austria (according to today’s territorial status) rose from 3 million (1800) to 6 million (1900) to 7 million (1960). The population has increased only slightly since the 1970s. The federal states of Vienna and Tyrol show higher growth rates than z. B. Carinthia, whose population only increased by 0.11% in 2016.

With a population density of (2017) 107 residents / km 2, Austria, with its high proportion of mountains, is one of the less densely populated countries in Europe. Almost 60% of the country is uninhabited, more than 70% of the population live in the basin landscapes, the Alpine foothills and the large Alpine valleys below 500 m above sea level. Vorarlberg, Upper Austria and the metropolitan area of ​​the state capital have the greatest population density. The proportion of the urban population is 66% (2017). Around every fifth Austrian lives in Vienna, another 11% in the eight provincial capitals.

Due to the symbiosis of tourism and mountain agriculture, there was no “mountain exodus” of the population in Austria. The rural settlements show, depending on the environment and the historical development, regionally quite different forms. In the mountains, the scattered settlements predominate with individual farms next to hamlets and clustered villages (often with alpine pastures), while in the lower parts of the country, especially in the north and east, from the Waldviertel to Central Styria, planned street, Anger and Waldhufendörfer are widespread.

The biggest cities in Austria

Biggest Cities (Residents January 1, 2019)
Vienna 1,897,500
Graz 288 800
Linz 205 700
Salzburg 154 200
innsbruck 132 100

Religion

Article 14 of the Basic Law of 1867 guarantees freedom of belief, conscience and freedom of belief. Constitutional law gives the state the right to officially recognize churches and religious societies and grants the legally recognized churches and religious societies equal religious corporation rights (public religious practice; autonomy in internal affairs). The basis of their legal relationships with the state is formed by the 1933 Concordat and the agreements for the Catholic Church that supplement the Concordat, as well as various denominational laws (Israelite Law, 1890; Protestant Law, 1961; Orthodox Law, 1967). Islam was recognized as a religious society in 1979 and Buddhism in 1983.

According to the church’s own statistics, at the end of 2016 5.16 million people belonged to the Catholic Church (just under 59% of the resident population) and over 300,000 to the Evangelical Church in Austria (including a good 288,000 Lutherans), an estimated 500,000 were Orthodox Christians. The 2016 figures for Muslims (around 700,000; around 8% of the resident population) and Jews (around 15,000) are also based on estimates. The total number of followers of other religions or those without religious affiliation is estimated at 2.1 million.

The Catholic Church comprises two archdioceses (Vienna, Salzburg) with seven suffragan diocese as well as a military diocese and an ordinariate for the Byzantine believers in Austria. On the Protestant side, in addition to the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg and Helvetic Confessions, there is a small Methodist and New Apostolic Church in Austria, as well as some Baptist, Mennonite and free Evangelical congregations.

The history of the Jewish community in what is now Austria goes back to the end of the 12th century; the Jewish community of Vienna is documented in 1237 (Jewish privilege of Emperor Frederick II). Today there are Jewish communities (Israelitische Kultusgemeinden) in Vienna (around 7,000 members), Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck and Graz (together around 300 members). – The center of Muslim life is Vienna (the Muslim population there is around 12%; Islamic educational and cultural center; around 40 prayer houses / rooms, including several classic mosques). – The »Austrian Buddhist Society« is also based in Vienna. The number of Buddhists is estimated at just over 0.1% of the population across Austria.