<p>What are the general point ranges needed to earn a 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1?</p>
<p>And as a side note, is there anybody else here in an AB class (only one offered by the high school) who's teaching themselves the BC subject matter?</p>
<p>What are the general point ranges needed to earn a 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1?</p>
<p>And as a side note, is there anybody else here in an AB class (only one offered by the high school) who's teaching themselves the BC subject matter?</p>
<p>64 - 108 ---5
53 - 63 ---4
36 - 52 ---3</p>
<p>take multiple choice raw score out of 45, multiply it by 1.2, now add your total FRQ score(total 54; 9 for each of the 6)...now look at the above scale...</p>
<p>example: 25/45 raw; and 7/9 on each frq: = 25<em>1.2=30+((7</em>6)) = 30+42 =72...which is a 5!!!</p>
<p>Can anyone verify this? Not that I don't believe you vader, but the requirements for a 5 were lower than I anticipated, so I just want to double check.</p>
<p>That is correct.</p>
<p>MC Raw Score = (# Correct ) - ( .25 x Incorrect )
Weighted MC Raw Score = ( Raw Score ) x 1.2
Composite Score = ( Weighted Raw Score ) + ( Free Response Total )
Round Composite Score</p>
<p>2003 Calculus BC Requirements:
1- 0-25
2- 26-35
3- 36-52
4- 53-63
5- 64-108</p>
<p>In 2003, you needed 60% to get a 5!
It varies by year to year, but it's usually pretty low, between 60 and 65%</p>
<p>Wow, you only need 60% for a 5 on calc BC? I always thought it was like 70-80, 60 does seem kinda low, especially since its math ...</p>
<p>heh. I've been getting in the 5 range so far.</p>