What range is needed to get a 5 in Calculus AB?

<p>By range, I mean adding up the multiple choice score and free response subscore:</p>

<p>For example:
0-40: 1
41-55: 2
56-70: 3
71-85: 4
86-120: 5</p>

<p>Except with numbers that I didn't just pull out of my head? :)</p>

<p>Only thing I know is that ~74/108 is a 5</p>

<p>ya its usually around 75</p>

<p>Our teacher told us that the way the scaling worked out one year (it might have even been last year), you could get a 4 by getting only half the raw points. </p>

<p>The ranges are pretty wide, which is reassuring. :) Good luck!</p>

<p>It's something like this:</p>

<p>5: 74-108
4: 73-58
3: 58-43</p>

<p>Where are you guys getting these numbers?</p>

<p>58-43 is a 3? since when?</p>

<p>Juniorita - Why, is that too low or too high? That's based on Kaplan's scoring guide (divided by 5).</p>

<p>45 multiple choice = 45 points (multiple by 1.2) = 54
6 FRQ (9 points each) = 54 points</p>

<p>Total points = 108</p>

<p>So, getting 25 points on the multiple choice (46.67%) and 25 points on the FRQ (46.3%) earns you a 3. </p>

<p>Now that I think about it, that does seem a bit too lenient. I don't know, that's what I was told in this thread:
<a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=341566%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=341566&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>From the 2003 Released Exam:
5: 66-108
4: 47-65
3: 29-46
2: 16-28
1: 0-15</p>

<p>Of course, it will vary depending on the curve from year to year.</p>

<p>Oh.. haha srry my bad.</p>

<p>Thanks OrchidThief..</p>

<p>Does anyone know what the worst curve is, roughly? (e.g. the one with the highest raw score required for a 5..)</p>