<p>Ok. then that’ll be my goal. thanks</p>
<p>can you explian to me how 108 is the highest raw score for APWH?</p>
<p>I was wondering where you got 108 for the total raw score for AP World. The PR book says its a 0-120 scale. but…i guess it changes year to year?</p>
<p>BUMP! </p>
<p>someone really should sticky this.</p>
<p>got any numbers for ap gov?</p>
<p>us gov is like 86/120 for a 5</p>
<p>Bump…good reference for practice tests</p>
<p>anyone for environmental sci?</p>
<p>^i second that…</p>
<p>How about Physics C?</p>
<p>does anyone know the curve for ap chinese?</p>
<p>Barrons AP Psychology says a 5 is 93 or higher while it says 103 here,
This seems like too big of a difference…</p>
<p>which one is more correct?</p>
<p>For physics C, it’s ~53/90 for both exams for a 5. Sometimes it may be as low as 45, sometimes ~57. </p>
<p>Environmental sci anyone?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>hey i dont really get this. So 64%- 108% is a five??? how is it possible to get over 100%…? im kinda confused T_T</p>
<p>it’s not a percent. WOW THAT SHOULD BE OBVIOUS :)</p>
<p>Useful thread. :)</p>
<p>This really (REALLY) doesn’t help, but I know they did a complete overhaul of the curve for the AP Gov exam scoring in 2007. This curve is listed from 1999, so I’m pretty sure the actual curve looks nothing like this one…</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>You need 64 points out of the total 108 for a 5, hence 64/108.</p>
<p>Any info on the AP German curve??</p>
<p>Is there any info on the internet/CC forums about how many multiple choice ? (correct) are needed to get a 5? (without the FRQs/writing responses)</p>
<p>-for Environmental Science
-for Psychology
-for Human Geography
-for Bio</p>