Score Calculator
Example Data Table
| Student | MC | CRQ | Essay | Raw Estimate | Scale Estimate | Band |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Example A | 24 | 8 | 4 | 44 | 86 | Mastery |
| Example B | 19 | 6 | 3 | 34 | 75 | Passing |
| Example C | 13 | 4 | 2 | 23 | 57 | Needs Review |
Formula Used
The calculator first adds multiple choice points, constructed response points, weighted essay points, and any adjustment points. Weighted essay points equal essay rating multiplied by essay weight.
Raw Score = MC Points + CRQ Points + Essay Rating × Essay Weight + Adjustment
Estimated Scale Score = 100 × (Raw Score ÷ Maximum Raw Score)Curve Power
A lower curve power raises the estimate. A higher curve power makes the result stricter. Use the official conversion chart when exact reporting is required.
How To Use This Calculator
- Enter the number of correct multiple choice answers.
- Add the constructed response points earned.
- Enter the essay rating from the rubric.
- Adjust the essay weight if your scoring model differs.
- Change the curve power for stricter or easier estimates.
- Press calculate to view the score above the form.
- Download the result as CSV or PDF for records.
About The Global History Regents Score Calculator
Purpose
This calculator helps students, tutors, and teachers estimate a Global History Regents score before final reporting. It turns raw classroom practice results into a clear scale estimate. The tool is useful after a practice exam, review session, or mock test. It does not replace an official state conversion chart. It is a planning guide.
Why Raw Points Matter
Regents exams include several task types. Multiple choice questions test quick recall and document reading. Constructed responses measure evidence, context, and written explanation. The essay checks argument quality, historical reasoning, organization, and use of evidence. A strong score usually needs steady performance across all parts. This calculator separates each section, so weak areas become easier to notice.
Using The Curve Setting
The curve power controls how raw percentage becomes a scale estimate. A value below one creates a friendlier curve. A value near one follows the raw percentage more closely. A value above one is stricter. Keep the default setting for general practice. Change it only when your teacher gives a different classroom model.
Planning Better Review
The result shows the estimated scale score, raw score, raw percentage, band, and points needed for a passing estimate. These details support targeted review. For example, a student with strong multiple choice results but a low essay rating should practice thesis writing and evidence use. A student with weak document responses should work on sourcing, context, and short written explanations.
Important Note
Official scoring can change by exam administration. Schools may use a published conversion table after the exam. Always compare final raw points with the correct official chart when available. Use this page for study planning, practice tracking, tutoring notes, and quick progress checks. The export buttons make it easier to save results, share reports, and compare attempts over time.
FAQs
Is this an official Regents score?
No. It is an estimate for practice and planning. Official results may use a state conversion chart for that exam date.
What is the passing score?
The default passing scale score is 65. You can change the passing value if your practice target is different.
What does curve power mean?
Curve power controls how raw percentage becomes a scale estimate. Lower values make the estimate more generous.
Can I change section maximums?
Yes. Change maximum values when your practice exam, worksheet, or teacher scoring guide uses different totals.
Why is essay weight included?
Essay ratings often need weighting in practice models. This field lets you make essay performance count more accurately.
What are adjustment points?
Adjustment points let you add or subtract local scoring changes. Use zero when no adjustment is needed.
Can I export my score?
Yes. After calculating, use the CSV or PDF button to save the score summary for review.
Who should use this tool?
Students, parents, tutors, and teachers can use it to estimate practice scores and plan focused review.