<p>Does anyone know what it is?</p>
<p>bueller????</p>
<p>i need this too. I heard 65% or so is 5.
EDIT: I thinlk it was 68</p>
<p>yeah it's like MC max = 40, multiply that by 1.25 to get a max possible of 50
(MC worth half, test out of 100, go figure)</p>
<p>you should be able to figure out FR on your own, 15% of FR for 1-5 and 25% for 6</p>
<p>and 68 for a 5 one particular year? but I heard it was lower last year due to harder questions... although they don't seem hard, but then again it's stats.</p>
<p>Idk but if any1 knows pleaz post
i cant start studying till tomorrow
lol</p>
<p>Dumb questions from a parent:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>How can the curve be set before the exam is given?</p></li>
<li><p>What difference does it make for your studying what the curve is? I mean, aren't you just going to do the best you can?</p></li>
</ol>
<p>1 - it isnt. we are speculating based on previous yeras
2 - at least for me, i have 5 other exams to study for. I have a goal, to get a 5, and if im already averageing a 5 i can exert my effort to other exams.</p>
<p>Ohhhhhhhhh</p>
<p>Thx</p>
<p>mathwiz, I know for sure that 68-100 was the cutoff for that particular year because the teacher had the score calculations. Seeing as how the difficulty of the questions vary slightly from year to year (this is based on many FR's), I''m 95% confident that the cutoff for a 5 lies between 65.0 and 71.0</p>
<p>htats awesome!!!</p>
<p>whats the cutoff for a three?</p>
<p>If I remember correctly 43-68 was a 4, but somehow that doesn't seems a bit low. Sorry, but if I gave you a rough estimate it would be way off. I'd like to think that 43 is the cutoff for a 3 but I would either be completely right or completely wrong.</p>
<p>Nevermind, found it in one of my books. From 2004:</p>
<p>68-100 -5
54-67 -4
41-53 -3
29-40 -2
0-28 - 1</p>
<p>So you can get a three only on the multiple choice.</p>
<p>lol @ snipez</p>