When I graded papers, no matter how many questions, I would mark the questions wrong that were wrong with checks. Then, to come up with a grade I would subtract the number possible with the number wrong. That would give me the total number right and from that you assign a grade to the paper.
every question is 2 points
To calculate the grade, first determine the number of correct answers. If 50 questions were answered and 7 were wrong, then 50 - 7 = 43 questions were correct. The grade can be calculated as (43 correct / 50 total) x 100, which equals 86%. Therefore, the grade is 86%.
71 percent
That's 77%
I don't have page 7 in front of me. Perhaps you could ask me one of the questions.
every question is 2 points
To calculate the grade, first determine the number of correct answers. If 50 questions were answered and 7 were wrong, then 50 - 7 = 43 questions were correct. The grade can be calculated as (43 correct / 50 total) x 100, which equals 86%. Therefore, the grade is 86%.
Even if you assume the questions are all worth the same number of marks, the answer may well depend on the grade boundaries.
75 percent or C plus
71 percent
That's 77%
10 - 3 = 7 7 / 10 = .7 = 70%
8+7 9+6 12+12 6+5 7+7
65
76.67%
If the answers are being graded on a 10 point each scale the grade would equate to a 70%.
You get 80%. The grade depends on the grade boundaries which are set by the examination board and may be varied for the purpose of standardisation.