<p>anyone know the raw score needed to get a 5 on ap european history?
and how u calculate the raw score too please</p>
<p>I asked my MEHAP teacher, and he said that a score of 58-60 (after guessing penalty is included) on the MC part was in line with getting a 5. That is with 80 questions and 1/4 guessing penalty.</p>
<p>In other words, I took three practice European History AP tests my teacher gave me. I left none blank on any of the questions.
I got 64, 69, and 68 right on tests.
64 - (16)(1/4) = 60
69 - 11(1/4) = 66
68 - 12(1/4) = 65</p>
<p>If you stay above a computed score of 60, you'll be fine for a 5 (as long as you're capable of ********ting the DBQ and the FR's).</p>
<p>You need a raw score of ~120 to get a 5 in euro.</p>
<p>80 mc x 1.125 = 90 pt max
-1/4 for guessing</p>
<p>DBQ: 9 x 4.5 = 40.5 pt max
FRQ1: 9 x 2.75 = 24.75 pt max
FRQ2: 9 x 2.75 = 24.75 pt max</p>
<p>Example:
MC: 60 right, 20 wrong
DBQ: 7
FRQ1: 6
FRQ2: 8</p>
<p>MC: 60 - (1/4)(20) = 55 * 1.125 = 61.875
DBQ: 7 x 4.5 = 32.5
FRQ1: 6 x 2.75 = 16.5
FRQ2: 8 x 2.75 = 22.0</p>
<p>61.875 + 32.5 + 16.5 + 22 = 132.875</p>
<p>Raw for a 5 is ~120</p>
<p>what curve is this info based on? i've seen different curves and in another place i saw that if you got 60 questions right and did pretty decent on your essays, you could only get a 3. just wondering which is more accurate</p>
<p>coming from someone who got a 5 last yr, i am pretty sure i got less than 60 right, and its not like my essays were perfect.</p>
<p>you may have been thinking 60%, which would be 48 questions. even that score would most likely earn you a 4.</p>