If you forget about the first 300 points, you need a score of 390/700 which
is 55.71%

55.71% of 61 questions is 34, so if all questions are equally scored, you
need to get 34 questions out of 61 right on this test, so you can max answer
27 wrong, which is what you ended up with in your first calculation.

Hth,

Ole

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 Ole Drews Jensen
 Systems Network Manager
 CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
 RWR Enterprises, Inc.
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://www.oledrews.com/ccnp
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 NEED A JOB ???
 http://www.oledrews.com/job
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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, October 21, 2000 6:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: 300/1000 scale (correct me if I'm wrong butt...)


Hey Group,
         I always wondered when taking my tests what they meant when they 
said that there would be a 300/1000 scale. Then somebody on the list 
explained that you start out with 300 points automatically. This is nice. I 
just tried to figure out how many could be gotten wrong on the BSCN and came

up with something that I don't believe. Follow me on this one...

61 questions, 690/1000 to pass. You start out with 300 so there is basically

700 points for a perfect score with 61 questions. Now, 700 points divided by

61 questions breaks out to something like 11.48 points per question. Then I 
take 1000 - 690 and get 310 points. This is how many you can miss and still 
pass. Finally, I divide that 310 points you can miss, by the number of
points 
per question (310/11.48) and get this as the number of questions you can
miss 
and still pass...27.003 (27 basically). 

I may be seeing it wrong in the area where I divide the 700/61 to get the 
number of points per question. It may be that even though you get 300, you 
still divide 1000/61, which would give you 16.39 points per question which
in 
the end would allow you to miss 18.9 (18 basically) questions. This sounds 
alot more like it.

This confuses me. If my initial calculation is the correct one, what this 
shows me is that on a test that has only 61 questions, somebody can get 27 
(almost half) of them wrong and still pass the test. Does this just sound
too 
easy to anybody else? Am I not understanding that 300/1000 scale thing, or
is 
this test just soooooo damn easy? Don't get me wrong, I never go for the
bare 
minimum. In fact, I don't believe anything under 800 is satisfactory (B 
basically), I just like to know all factors before a test. Thanks for 
responses guys/ladies...

Mark Zabludovsky ~ CCNA, CCDA, 1/4-NP
<A HREF="mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

      "If you need luck, apparently you're not prepared...Go study!"
 

   ~Mark Zabludovsky~

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