Provided that all 150 exam questions are weighted equally, then 105 correct responses is 70%.
Nine.
To achieve an 80 percent score on a 75-question test, you need to answer at least 60 questions correctly (since 80% of 75 is 60). This means you can get a maximum of 15 questions wrong (75 total questions - 60 correct answers = 15 wrong).
To achieve an 87 percent score on a 125-question test, you need to correctly answer 87 percent of the questions. This means you need to answer 109 questions correctly (0.87 x 125 = 108.75, rounded up). Therefore, you can get 16 questions wrong (125 - 109 = 16).
To achieve a 70 percent score on a 49-question test, you need to correctly answer at least 34.3 questions. Since you can't answer a fraction of a question, you need to round up to 35 correct answers. Therefore, you can get a maximum of 14 questions wrong (49 - 35 = 14).
You can get 60 questions wrong and get a 70 percent but if you get 61 wrong you are at a 69.5 percent.
Each question is worth 2.5 percent. You can get 8 wrong.
Provided that all 150 exam questions are weighted equally, then 105 correct responses is 70%.
95% of the questions, provided there are no penalties for wrong answers.
69 questions
1
Nine.
20
22 questions can be wrong. This means that you would have to get 33 marks, which is 60%
To achieve an 80 percent score on a 75-question test, you need to answer at least 60 questions correctly (since 80% of 75 is 60). This means you can get a maximum of 15 questions wrong (75 total questions - 60 correct answers = 15 wrong).
To achieve an 87 percent score on a 125-question test, you need to correctly answer 87 percent of the questions. This means you need to answer 109 questions correctly (0.87 x 125 = 108.75, rounded up). Therefore, you can get 16 questions wrong (125 - 109 = 16).
10 can be wrong and 30 right; 30/40 = 75%