<p>I just got the AP US Gov and Politics crash course and this is the scale for 2010:</p>
<p>90-120 = 5
75-89 = 4
60 - 74 = 3
36-59 = 2
0 - 35 = 1</p>
<p>Lower?</p>
<p>I just got the AP US Gov and Politics crash course and this is the scale for 2010:</p>
<p>90-120 = 5
75-89 = 4
60 - 74 = 3
36-59 = 2
0 - 35 = 1</p>
<p>Lower?</p>
<p>anyone have the envi sci curve? i’ve looked just about everywhere and it’s eluding me…</p>
<p>Does anyone else have any information on the current AP US Gov curve? The one posted in this thread says 40% can get a 3, but more recent posts say 50% is needed for a 3.</p>
<p>Does anyone know where we can find the current curves for these classes?</p>
<p>^The most current curves can be found in some AP Review books, which is where I looked for the AP US Gov curve. It’s just that the curve seems to have raised 10 points on that exam, which seems like a lot to me. So look in recent review books.</p>
<p>Do those curves increase every year?</p>
<p>No, they stay around the same every year.</p>
<p>The curves go up and down each year, but going up by 10 points just seemed like a lot to me so I wondered about it.</p>
<p>What about Calculus and Chemistry</p>
<p>I have noticed that the Calculus curves seem to stay the same from year to year. I don’t know about Chemistry though.</p>
<p>For AP Bio:
Take your raw mc points and multiply it by 0.9.
Take your total essay points multiply it by 1.5.
Add the two quantities to get your composite score. </p>
<p>Does this also work for human geography???</p>
<p>If the new curves for AP US Gov are accurate, then it comes to about half in order to score a 3. That doesn’t seem too bad, but it seems like the old curve posted here is a significant amount lower than that. 49 to 60 is a pretty big jump.</p>
<p>@blabbermouth- for Human Geography, I think you multiply the amount of multiple choice correct by .8, but I have no idea about the essays.</p>
<p>seriously though what about for apes</p>
<p>I thought one of the selling points of APES is that a 5 is pretty much guaranteed.</p>
<p>haha well some of us aren’t super geniuses</p>
<p>1999 AP Chem curve for a 5 is 62.5% for anyone who is curious.</p>
<p>Figured I’d bump this as the first AP tests are less than a week away…</p>
<p>hey guys, back on rslnerd’s post a year ago he found some AP test calculators. Just thought I’d let you know that the site has been moved to a better, faster, more useful site at [url=<a href=“http://appass.com/]AP”>http://appass.com/]AP</a> Pass - AP Test Calculators, Study Guides, and Resources<a href=“or%20%5Burl=http://appass.com/calculators/home]AP%20Pass%20-%20AP%20Test%20Score%20Calculators[/url]”>/url</a> to take you right to the calculators. It should be consistent with the previously posted curves. Hope this is useful</p>
<p>AP Art History calculator has been added, just in case anyone is taking that test</p>