Enter Quiz Details
Example Data Table
| Quiz | Score Earned | Total Marks | Weight % | Quiz % | Weighted Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quiz 1 | 18 | 20 | 15 | 90.00% | 13.50 |
| Quiz 2 | 16 | 20 | 15 | 80.00% | 12.00 |
| Quiz 3 | 22 | 25 | 20 | 88.00% | 17.60 |
| Quiz 4 | 17 | 20 | 20 | 85.00% | 17.00 |
| Quiz 5 | 26 | 30 | 30 | 86.67% | 26.00 |
| Adjusted course score after bonus and penalties | 86.10% | ||||
Formula Used
Quiz Percentage = (Score Earned ÷ Total Marks) × 100
Weighted Contribution = Quiz Percentage × (Quiz Weight ÷ 100)
Weighted Average = (Sum of Weighted Contributions ÷ Sum of Weights) × 100
Adjusted Score = Weighted Average + Bonus Points − Late Penalty
Consistency Range = Highest Quiz Percentage − Lowest Quiz Percentage
These formulas help compare raw marks, weighted performance, and final adjusted class standing with clear grading thresholds.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the student and course details if needed.
- Fill in earned marks, total marks, and weight for each quiz.
- Set your target percentage and grade thresholds.
- Add any bonus points or late penalties.
- Press Calculate Quiz Score to show the result above the form.
- Review weighted averages, grade status, target gap, and performance trend.
- Use the export buttons to download the result summary as CSV or PDF.
Why This Tracker Helps
This tracker helps students, parents, and teachers monitor quiz performance with more depth than a simple average. It combines raw marks, weighted scoring, grade thresholds, late penalties, and bonus points in one place. The result panel also highlights trends, target gaps, and consistency levels, making it easier to spot progress or decline across assessments.
Because every quiz can carry a different weight, the calculator normalizes scores before applying adjustments. That gives a fairer course view than adding percentages without context. The example table shows how weighted contributions build a final outcome, while the formula section explains each step clearly for classroom, tutoring, or self-study use.
The layout stays simple on small screens and expands cleanly on larger screens. Export tools support record keeping, student review meetings, and quick sharing. Whether tracking weekly tests or major class quizzes, this page gives a practical structure for accurate score analysis.
FAQs
1. What is a weighted quiz score?
A weighted quiz score reflects both performance and quiz importance. A high score on a heavily weighted quiz changes the final result more than a small practice quiz.
2. Why do I need total marks for each quiz?
Total marks convert each quiz into a percentage. This lets the tracker compare quizzes fairly, even when different tests use different maximum marks.
3. Can I use this for fewer than five quizzes?
Yes. You can keep unused quizzes at zero weight. The calculator only uses the entered weights when normalizing the weighted average.
4. How are bonus points handled?
Bonus points are added after the weighted average is calculated. This is useful for participation, extra credit, or attendance-based adjustments.
5. How is late penalty applied?
Late penalty is subtracted from the weighted average after bonuses. It helps estimate a final class result when policy-based deductions apply.
6. What does consistency range mean?
Consistency range shows the gap between the highest and lowest quiz percentages. A smaller range often suggests steadier performance across assessments.
7. What does the trend label show?
The trend compares quiz percentages in sequence. Rising results suggest improvement, falling results indicate decline, and equal changes suggest stable performance.
8. Can teachers use this for class review meetings?
Yes. The tracker is useful for progress reviews, reporting discussions, and student feedback because it summarizes grades, averages, targets, and quiz-by-quiz details clearly.