<p>Nowhere on that worksheet does it say it was 63%…My teacher gave us that EXACT sheet after our practice exam and that is based off of another sheet. That table is the likelihood of what score you will get based off of a multiple choice test. I took the test and got an 81% on the multiple choice(it was a practice test so nobody studied) and that gave me an 83% chance of getting a 5 on the real exam.</p>
<p>^
…
There are two pages. You are looking at page 2. Try looking at page 1.
It says
“AP Score
Conversion Chart
Biology
95 - 150 5
…”</p>
<p>95 / 150 * 100 = 63.3333 %</p>
<p>Why can’t people use this link too. [AP</a> Central - Multiple-Choice Scores](<a href=“Supporting Students from Day One to Exam Day – AP Central | College Board”>Supporting Students from Day One to Exam Day – AP Central | College Board)</p>
<p>It gives the scaled score for the last 2 released tests for every single subject.</p>
<p>World: 64%
Micro: 83%
Macro: 81%</p>
<p>edit:
Oh, and that chart you are referring to isn’t based off “another sheet”. It is the data from how people scored on that test.</p>
<p>The last released Econ curves were from 2005. I’m implicitly asking if they changed significantly over the past 6 years.</p>
<p>Hold on, I’ll go ask the chief readers for the econ tests.</p>
<p>Sigh…similar to how people say that the Eng Lang curve was lenient, I’m asking people who took the Econ tests and got their scores what they think the curve was like.</p>
<p>Their estimate would be no better than using the 2005 tests. In fact, it would probably be much worse.</p>