As far as I'm aware, your score is determined by how you do in comparison to those who took the same set of questions as you. Not merely by how many you get right.
As far as I'm aware, your score is determined by how you do in comparison to those who took the same set of questions as you. Not merely by how many you get right.
I have a question. If I take the exam a month later than you, and if we had the same tests, then how would they compare us, since your scores (most likely) may have already been released?
I always figured they took your performance on your particular set of questions and compared it to the average performance on those particular questions in general. Much the same way a question bank gives you your score and then the average score on that particular set of questions.