Two thirds
8 + 4 = 12
8 / 12 = 2 / 3
or 66.67%
you would get a 70
6 out of 17 wrong in a math test means that the student got 11 out of 17 answers correct, which would be considered a 64.7% score.
1 wrong out of 200 means 199 correct. So 100*199/200 % = 99.5 % correct. The percentage score depends on whether all questions carry the same mark, whether or not there is a penalty for a wrong answer.
17/20, 85%
To calculate your score, subtract the number of wrong answers from the total number of questions: 60 - 12 = 48 correct answers. To find the percentage score, divide the number of correct answers by the total number of questions and multiply by 100: (48/60) x 100 = 80%. Therefore, your score is 80%.
That would be 15/16 times 100 = 93.75% correct
He got 6 wrong.
16-5 = 1111/16*100 = 68.75%Thus if you got all of the 11 questions you did do COMPLETELY correct the maximum mark you could get would be 69%. However, if you got any of your 11 answers wrong your score would be less than this.
that's very good then that's 28 you got right try asking your teacher for the percent
To calculate your score, first, determine how many questions you answered correctly. If you got 9 wrong out of 40 questions, that means you answered 31 questions correctly (40 - 9 = 31). To find the percentage score, divide the number of correct answers by the total number of questions and multiply by 100: (31/40) × 100 = 77.5%. Therefore, your score is 77.5%.
In the PSAT, just as in the AP and SAT, if you guess at an answer and get it wrong you lose one quarter of a point. For each question you answer correctly, you gain one point. Therefore if you got 4 questions wrong and one right, you would have a total score of zero. If you had skipped those 4 questions you got wrong, you would have a total score of one.
88%