a historical question is a question that has no answer to it. eg. Are u mad?
10 questions normally for books with 19 and under points 20 questions for books worth 20 and over points!
Historical arguments are formed to answer historical questions. Answer this question…
The American Mathematics Competition 10 (AMC 10) is made up of 25 multiple choice questions (A through E). All questions are worth 6 points if correct, 0 if incorrect, and from 1.5 to 2.5 points if blank depending on the year. Recently the contest has moved toward 1.5 points for a blank answer.
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.
5 incorrect answers and 15 correct answers
Donovan scored 39 out of 50 questions, which gives him a score of 78% (39/50 * 100). If Marco's score is 10 percentage points higher, his score would be 88%. To find the number of questions Marco got right, we calculate 88% of 50, which is 44. Therefore, Marco answered 44 questions correctly.
You have "30" 2 point questions and = 60 points, and "10" 4 point questions which = 40 so 60+40= 100 (check)
If there are 10 questions, then each question will be worth 10 points to make a total grade of 100. Therefore, if you got 6 questions correct (10 - 4 = 6) then your grade will be a 60 (6 times 10)
If all the questions are worth the same and the whole test is 100 points, then each question is worth 12.5 points
'Historical' points are points earned before a major site update changed the way contributions were counted. The site describes them as "miscellaneous points from our older system".
The web address of the Points Ne Historical Society is: pointsnortheast.org
Let's use algebra to solve this problem. We know that there are 24 questions in total, so x + y = 24. The total points available is 100, so 3x + 5y = 100. By solving these two equations simultaneously, we can find the values of x and y.