<p>title says it all :)</p>
<p>Chem: 85 800
84 800
83 800
82 800
81 800
80 800
79 790 or 800
78 790 or 800
77 780 or 790
76 780 or 790
75 770 or 780
74 770 or 780
73 760 or 770
72 760 or 770
This test was VERY similar in difficulty to the 1994 released exam in the 1998 edition of the Collegeboard Subject test book, but simultaneously harder than the ridiculously easy test in the 2005 book.</p>
<p>for math2, is a 43/50 =800 rare?</p>
<p>actually in the 1998 edition, 43/50 is an 800. 41-42/50 is usually 800. In the 2005 it was 44/50(VERY HARSH CURVE).</p>
<p>the curve on the right side of the chemistry is the ACTUAL curve from the May 1994 SAT 2 Chem exam from the 1998 BB Subject test book.</p>
<p>yay my hopes r going up abt the math2 curve :)</p>
<p>How does CB determine curves for individual test dates, given that there are no experimental sections?</p>
<p>By how well everyone does.</p>
<p>But then that would make the curves contingent upon the abilities of that particular testing group, wouldn’t it?</p>
<p>Yep so hope it was a weak group</p>
<p>lets do some math
how many people took said test
how many statistics classes have you taken(0 with a tad bit of common sense should be enough)
how much variance will there be</p>
<p>bump bump ^^</p>
<p>someone do us history and bio!</p>
<p>I’d guess -3=800 on Lit</p>
<p>Predictions:</p>
<p>76/80 = 800 on Bio E / M
43/50 = 800 on M2C</p>
<p>I’m guessing -9 = 800 on US</p>
<p>-9 questions? or -9 raw points?</p>
<p>x/60 for 800 on literature?</p>
<p>750?</p>
<p>i went into the exam praying for at least a 700, but i think i only managed to get 4 or 5 wrong =D</p>
<p>Ha. Definitely missing 9 questions. You can’t get negative raw points. =) Or at least I don’t believe so.</p>
<p>i think datonepersonisme meant to say that if you missed 9 questions you’re raw score wouldnt be the same as subtracting 9 raw points from the total score. Like if there was what 85 questions, -9 raw points would be a 76 raw score…but missing 9 questions would be around a 72 or 73 raw score because of the - 1/3 for every wrong question.</p>