<p>Like % correct for MC and FRQ?</p>
<p>Or do we just get that dumb little number?</p>
<p>Like % correct for MC and FRQ?</p>
<p>Or do we just get that dumb little number?</p>
<p>As far as I know, no. But I do believe it is possible (although I have never done it) to order your FRQ booklet and have it sent to your house</p>
<p>shawnspencer is right. You only get the number. You can order your FRQ booklet for a fee, but it will be exactly as you sent it, i.e. no scores, no notes from the grader.</p>
<p>the point of this is that colleges would get that information as well. and as it is, colleges can give students credit for a 4 or a 5 if they want. but what happens when they start giving credit for 67% MC 81% Free Response? CB keeps it hazy so all we get is a 1-5 ranking</p>
<p>@yayitsme123 Good thinking, that’s right.</p>
<p>@yayitsme123 at the same time though don’t colleges only get the scores on the SATs (eg 500 m, 800 cr, 500w = 1800 total), while we [the test takers] get the # of questions we got wrong and stuff as well? so selective information giving should be possible and ok?</p>
<p>You don’t get any information as to your % score with the exception of a perfect score, in which case you receive a letter in the fall.</p>
<p>@shinchang With the SAT, people with the same score have performed at the same level on the test (hence the different curves), and the number of questions wrong is very close between tests. On AP exams, a score just sets an upper and lower limit for a person’s performance, with a whole range of possible performance levels in between. This matters particularly when discussing 5s, where on some exams receiving a 5 could indicate a score anywhere from 55%-100% </p>