If there are 20 questions then each question is worth 5 points because 100 total points divided by 20 equals 5.
If you missed 8 questions then 8 times 5 points equals 40 points wrong, so you have to subtract that from 100 to get a grade of 60. Study harder next time.
In most classrooms, 60% is a failing grade.
If you got 32/42, your percentage will be 76%.
If kept to a normal grading scale (not a curve), the grade would be a D- or F.
4% wrong
According to my grade calculator it is a D. If there are a 100 possible and you got 65 than means you missed 40% of the test.
99 = 11 x 32
If you got 20 problems wrong on a 75 question test your grade would be 73% or a C. You can find that by subtracting the amount of questions you got wrong from the amount you got right, 55 in this case. Divide the amount of correct questions by the amount of questions on the test to get .733333. That is the grade.
To get two wrong from 1 question is quite an achievement. I would imagine the outcome is not gradeable. That level of effort should certainly be worth two 'F's .
It depends how many points each question is worth. If each question is worth five points on a twenty question test, you would get ninety-five percent.
80% or B
88%
C
Assuming that each question carries the same one mark: 88% right = 100% - 88 % wrong = 12 % wrong → 12 % of 44 = 12/100 × 44 = 5.28 wrong Assuming that your percentage right was truncated (and not rounded to 89% to the nearest whole number), you got 5 wrong.
You would have a 90%. It all depends on what grading scale your school uses. For some it would be an A (or A-) for others it would be a B+.
85% or 51/60
You get 60%. What that means in terms of grades depends on the grade boundaries.
i asked this question and the answer i got was republicans but then i got that answer marked wrong on the test so the real answer is federalists Pennfoster student :)
I took a test that had 35 questions. I got a 91%, how many did I miss?