That will depend on the points awarded to each question.
22 of them.
95 questions 100 raw points scrambled paragraphs - 5 questions, 2 points ea. logical reasoning - 10 questions, 1 points ea. reading - 30 questions, 1 points ea. total - 45 questions, 50 points max. math - 50 questions, 50 points ea. However, your admissions is not based on the raw score alone (#right/100). It is calculated into a curve of a xy graph, and i only know 2 people outside of the NYC dept of education that have the 2009 curve. Nationwide in Flushing, and a certain Jet Chaw who teaches there.
You cannot know that. If you are told the total number of points for the test, you know (or count) the number of questions and you are told that each question is worth the same number of points then, and only then, each question is worth (total points/number of questions) points.
It depends on how many points each question is worth. If they are worth 1 point, 30, 2 points, 15, etc...
On a 22 question test, if you miss one question (wich can be written as 21/22 -- 21 divided by 22), you will have a 95.45, an A, according to a calculator. So, 100-95.45 (100 minus 95.45) is about 4.55: therefore, on a 22 question test, each question is worth about 4.55 points. :)
10 questions normally for books with 19 and under points 20 questions for books worth 20 and over points!
There's no answer if no total points.
That will depend on the points awarded to each question.
22 points
You may read as many unanswered questions as you please. Nothing to buy, no points to get either.
It is 22 AR points
22 weight watchers points
four.
Answer 34 questions correctly, ignore the rest.
60
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%.