The "7 questions" can refer to various frameworks or methodologies depending on the context, such as project planning, problem-solving, or critical thinking. A common set includes: What is the problem? Why is it important? Who is affected? What are the possible solutions? What are the risks? What resources are needed? When will it be implemented? These questions help guide analysis and decision-making effectively.
7 wrong out of 22 questions = 31.8% wrong. 15 correct out of 22 questions = 68.2% correct. I hope it wasn't a math test.
Even if you assume the questions are all worth the same number of marks, the answer may well depend on the grade boundaries.
Yes, some do. Many answer questions about themselves.
71% of the questions were answered correctly
10 questions
7
Who, what, where, when, why, how
If someone got 80 percent and answered 7 questions correctly, you can find the total number of questions by using the formula: correct answers = total questions × percentage. Let ( x ) be the total number of questions. Thus, ( 0.80x = 7 ). Solving for ( x ), we get ( x = 7 / 0.80 = 8.75 ), which means there were 9 questions on the test, as the total must be a whole number.
Mike would have completed 7 questions to get to just about 60% of the test. (7 / 12 = 0.58)
u cant
7%
28%