<p>So I got a 51.5 in math, 40.25 in writing, and 41 in critical reading; if i was to disregard my essay score, what would be the score conversion??</p>
<p>I have a conversion table in my book, but it's very weird. for example in the math section, for the score of 52 the scaled score is 720-800. *** does that mean?? do i get a 720 or 800 lol</p>
<p>since whichever test you too wasn’t a real administered test (or came from other testing companies like PR – if this isn’t from blue book I wager it’s from PR 11 tests), it can only give you a range. Go ahead and take the average (i.e. 760).</p>
<p>Btw, if this is the first test from PR 11 tests, just let me say that this particular practice test is ridiculously difficult (imo).</p>
<p>The 720-800 is just a range of possible scores. I believe there are 54 math questions; during an actual test it’s really unlikely a 51.5 will score you an 800. I’d say somewhere around the center of the interval (760).</p>
<p>Since your raw writing score uses your essay score, it’s difficult to predict your writing score without an essay. Your writing raw score is</p>
<p>Raw score = (MC score) + 2*(Essay score)</p>
<p>There are 49 writing questions and a max. essay score of 12, so the maximum raw writing score is 49 + 2(12) = 73.</p>
<p>I agree take the average, but don’t be discouraged if you got a lower score than you wanted. Remember, especially if it’s not the blue book, it won’t be ridiculously accurate anyway. Even then, each individual test differs- my projected score from the practice I took was ~100 points lower than my actual score. It’s good to give an estimate, but take it with a grain of salt.</p>