Your search found 1 match. The following is the full list of ACT testing locations in Zimbabwe 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 Zimbabwe
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 Zimbabwe
City | Center Name | Center Code |
Harare | Harare International School | 871510 |
More about Zimbabwe
ECONOMY: AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY, LIVESTOCK AND FISHING
15.4% of the active population is employed in agriculture. The sector continues to have a significant weight, it participated for 19% in the formation of national income in 2006, but is in a decreasing phase; its importance rests above all on corn (its crops occupy almost two fifths of the land), wheat, cassava, millet and sorghum; various products offers fruit growing, represented above all by citrus fruits and bananas, then by apples, pears and peaches. The main export products are plantation crops, mainly tobacco, cotton, sugar cane, soy, tea, coffee and peanuts. The tobacco, of very high quality, had found a wide position on the international markets; the country was in fifth place in world production with approx. 200,000 t in 2004, but already in 2005 the production had dropped to 65,000 t. § As far as forestry activities are concerned, the teak and Rhodesian mahogany; conifers and eucalyptus are used as cellulose woods. The most productive areas are located towards the eastern border. The main cellulose processing plants are located in Mutare. § Due to the abundance of pastures and the mild temperature, the environment of the upper Veld is very suitable for breeding, which is a thriving activity especially as regards the selection of breeds thanks also to the contribution of modern technologies; the zootechnical patrimony was however decimated, in more or less serious measure, during the civil war and by repeated droughts and epidemics. Cattle, goats and sheep prevail. § The creation of Lake Kariba it allowed to start the fishing activity, which is actually still underdeveloped and scarcely profitable.
ECONOMY: INDUSTRY AND MINERAL RESOURCES
There are various basic industries by now established; the iron and steel industry, which produces steel, cast iron and ferroalloys, is flanked by the metallurgy of copper and tin, the processing of asbestos, the processes for obtaining metallurgical coke, as well as the processing of gold. Located in the production centers of Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare, the mechanical industry has motor vehicle assembly factories, factories for the production of household appliances and other machinery, etc.; there is no shortage, again among the basic industries, various cement factories, oil refineries (Mutare), which process crude oil from Beira, in Mozambique, chemical complexes (fertilizers, plastics, pharmaceuticals), paper mills, etc. The panorama of manufacturing activities is also quite varied, essentially linked to the transformation of local products and which therefore include food complexes (sugar factories, meat canneries, dairy plants, oil mills, breweries, milling complexes), tobacco factories, cotton mills, shoe factories, furniture, etc. Bulawayo and Harare concentrate most of the industrial activities. § Various and some significant are the resources of the subsoil; mining, in particular the search for gold, was the first activity that pushed whites into the country and there are many mineral products widely exported. Gold is still important, even if the country is no longer among the world’s leading producers, flanked by other rare and precious minerals such as diamonds, emeralds, platinum and silver and asbestos, chromite, nickel, copper; coal, iron ores, silver, tin, antimony, magnesite, bauxite, tungsten, phosphates etc. are also extracted. Energy availability is conspicuous and is based both on thermal power plants and on hydroelectric plants; among the latter, the power plant fed by the colossal Kariba dam, on the Zambezi, clearly emerges which, while contributing to supplying various plants.