Each question would be worth 2.5%
According to my grade calculator with a 60 question test your break point would be 30 for a D- and a 57 for an A+, so an 80% would 47 correct questions and that means you would get a B and that is missing 10 questions.
You can get up to 150 questions wrong.
If you took a test with 130 questions on them each question would value approximately 1.3 points per question.
22 questions can be wrong. This means that you would have to get 33 marks, which is 60%
I would like the test question about NIMS IS-300
One question in eight would be 12.5% of the test - if all the questions whereof equivalent difficulty.Tests often have some "hard" and some "easy" questions so the percentage of marks per question is not dependant on the ration of one question to the number of questions.
According to my grade calculator with a 60 question test your break point would be 30 for a D- and a 57 for an A+, so an 80% would 47 correct questions and that means you would get a B and that is missing 10 questions.
You can get up to 150 questions wrong.
There is no such valid test, so I would definitely question it.
If you took a test with 130 questions on them each question would value approximately 1.3 points per question.
You just did, but I question your intentions.Was that a question?Don't ask me another question!Will that question be on the test?
22 questions can be wrong. This means that you would have to get 33 marks, which is 60%
I would like the test question about NIMS IS-300
If the test is worth 100 points, each question would be worth approximately 2.86 points.
Test questions appear in certain environments (psychologysts use them in personality tests for instance) to make sure that the patient is paying attention and reading the questions carefully. A sample test question would be: "This is a test question. Please circle letter B". If you fail the different test questions, the test may not be valid.
Questions on a test do not always have the same point value. The answer cannot be determined.
It would depend on the question.