<p>about what percentage should one get to get a 4 on the exam...and how much for a 5?
thanks!</p>
<p>bump bump bump</p>
<p>Depends by Year.
Depends by Test.</p>
<p>on average?</p>
<p>Around 72% I believe.</p>
<p>Ha. Ha. </p>
<p>You're a real funny guy Her0. </p>
<p>I would suggest looking in a test booklet and trying to approximate your score as best you can with the rubric and scale they give you. If anyone can find some other source of information...please do share, I'd really be interested to see it...</p>
<p>72% for a 5. The info came from the Princeton Review. paungle, calm down...you're acting like a....</p>
<p>Her0, I owe you an apology--but first, an explanation:</p>
<p>So, basically, I couldn't tell if your post was serious because 1) it didn't say what a 72% corresponded to (4 or 5) 2) it didn't have a citation (i.e. "the info came from the princeton review") and 3) you didn't mention how the FRQ factor into the equation. </p>
<p>So.....I opted for the conclusion that you were joking....I didn't want to look lame and take you seriously and then have you laugh at me for missing the joke. Clealry I overthought this. Anyway, I'm sorry.</p>
<p>Btw, DO you know how the FRQs factor in?</p>
<p>FRQs are 1/3 of the test.</p>
<p>I thought that they were 40%?</p>
<p>nope, one third</p>
<p>gotcha, thanks. does anyone have any suggestions about where to study to quickly improve graphing skills?</p>
<p>at Border's absolved in a PR book haha</p>
<p>I'd like to improve my graphing skills too</p>