<p>I was wondering if anyone could post the approximate percentages you need for each of the different scores 1-5. </p>
<p>Something like</p>
<p>5: x%
4: y%
3: z%
2:...</p>
<p><insert source=""></insert></p>
<p>I was wondering if anyone could post the approximate percentages you need for each of the different scores 1-5. </p>
<p>Something like</p>
<p>5: x%
4: y%
3: z%
2:...</p>
<p><insert source=""></insert></p>
<p>5: 75%
4: 65%
3: 50%
2: 35%</p>
<p>Princeton Review</p>
<p>but according to some people on here a 5 is 65%</p>
<p>According to my teacher:</p>
<p>115-180->5
91-114->4
63-90->3
49-62->2
0-48->1</p>
<p>180?? How'd you manage that? 6x15 for the FRQ = 90. 70 MC questions... 160 points.
0-48 is kinda harsh for a 1</p>
<p>"180?? How'd you manage that? 6x15 for the FRQ = 90. 70 MC questions... 160 points."</p>
<p>the MC is multiplied by 1.286</p>
<p>according to kaplan:
124-180-->5
71-123-->4
59-70-->3
30-58-->2
0-29--></p>
<p>hope that helps</p>
<p>That makes a little more sense...
Thanks :]</p>
<p>That Kaplan doesn't make too much sense. According to them, a 5 requires 68%. But a 4 is less than 40%. I think that Chase's seems much more accurate.</p>
<p>CHASE!!!??? IS THAT YOU!!?? You came back!!! (sorry, my physics teacher was named Chase and he left us so now we have no way of reviewing and managing to get above a 1...)</p>
<p>yeah i thought that kaplan had a really weird curve</p>