If you have 100 points and 50 questions, you take 100 points divided by 50 questions, so you can see how many points each question is, which would be 2 points per question. If you got 45 questions right, multiple 45 by 2 and you get 90%.
Well, assuming you got ALL the rest of the questions correct, (unlikely) - the most you could score would be 74%.
That would be a score of 80%.Hopefully, it was not a math test.
To achieve an 80% score on a 55-question test, you would need to answer 44 questions correctly (55 questions x 0.80 = 44 questions). To find out how many questions you can get wrong, subtract the number of correct answers from the total number of questions: 55 total questions - 44 correct answers = 11 questions wrong. Therefore, you can get 11 questions wrong on a 55-question test and still achieve an 80% score.
Your score is the part of the test where you supplied correct answers.On a test with 25 questions, if you missed 5, you answered (25 - 5) = 20 correctly.If every questions was worth the same credit, then your score is 20/25 = 80% .I'm hoping fervently that it wasn't a math test.
80%, 24 questions correct out of 30
the test has 18 questions. you need to answer at least 15 correct to pass.
To achieve a score of 70% on a 300-question test, you would need to answer 210 questions correctly. To find out how many questions you can miss, subtract the number of correct answers from the total number of questions: 300 - 210 = 90. Therefore, you can miss up to 90 questions on a 300-question test and still achieve a score of 70%.
To get a 50% on the test, you need at least (50/100) * 35 = 17.5 questions correct. If half credit is not possible, you need to get at least 18 questions correct to get a score of at least 50%. A score of 17 will be just shy of 50%.
Make sure you know all the questions and all the correct answers beforehand!
If a person missed 2 questions on a test, they would have 44/46 correct. This would mean they had approximately .9565 correct. That times 100% = 95.65%
To achieve a score of 70% on a 120-question test, you need to answer correctly at least 84 questions (70% of 120). This means you can miss a maximum of 36 questions (120 total questions - 84 correct answers = 36 missed questions). Therefore, missing 36 questions would still allow you to reach a score of 70%.
This shows the laziness of the teacher: she made a test with 96 questions, not 100, and the student only got three-quarters of them correct--which also means the student was lazy in not studying enough to get a better score.