Calculator
Formula used
FRQ Raw Total = Question 1 + Question 2 + Question 3
FRQ Section Percentage = (FRQ Raw Total ÷ 20) × 100
Weighted FRQ Contribution = (FRQ Raw Total ÷ 20) × 33.33
Optional Overall Estimate = ((MCQ ÷ 60) × 66.67) + ((FRQ Raw Total ÷ 20) × 33.33)
Question limits: Question 1 uses 10 points. Questions 2 and 3 use 5 points each.
How to use this calculator
- Enter an optional student name and practice set label.
- Type your Question 1 score from 0 to 10.
- Type your Question 2 and Question 3 scores from 0 to 5.
- Add the optional MCQ raw score if you want a combined estimate.
- Press Calculate score to show the result above the form.
- Review the summary cards, chart, strongest area, and focus area.
- Use the export buttons to save the result as CSV or PDF.
Example data table
| Student | Set | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | FRQ Total | FRQ % | Weighted FRQ % | MCQ | Overall Estimate % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aisha Khan | Set 1 | 8 | 4 | 5 | 17 | 85.00% | 28.33% | 49 | 82.77% |
| Bilal Noor | Set 2 | 6.5 | 3.5 | 4 | 14 | 70.00% | 23.33% | 42 | 70.00% |
| Hina Ali | Set 3 | 9 | 5 | 4.5 | 18.5 | 92.50% | 30.83% | 54 | 90.83% |
FAQs
1) Does this page give an official AP score?
No. It estimates practice performance from your entered rubric points. Official scaled scores depend on the actual exam form and annual conversion process.
2) Why is Question 1 weighted more heavily?
Question 1 carries more raw points than the two short questions. That larger point cap makes it contribute more to the FRQ total.
3) Can I enter half points?
Yes. The form accepts half points for flexible self-scoring during practice, tutoring reviews, and rubric discussions.
4) What happens if I skip the MCQ field?
The calculator still works. It will show your FRQ raw total, FRQ section percentage, and weighted FRQ contribution without the combined estimate.
5) Why are some values capped automatically?
Automatic caps keep the results valid. For example, Question 1 cannot exceed 10, and each short question cannot exceed 5.
6) What does the strongest area card mean?
It compares each question as a percentage of its own maximum. The highest proportional result becomes your strongest area.
7) What does the focus area card mean?
It points to the lowest proportional question score. That helps you identify which part of your practice needs the most review.
8) Can I use this page for class practice sets?
Yes. Add a set label, student name, and rubric points. Then export the summary for quick review or record keeping.