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5 answers

Yeah, it's fine. I think the maximum you can get in year nine is an 8 although I'm sure someone will correct me.

They relate roughly to grades at GCSE exams when he's sixteen - 10 = A*, 9 = A, 8 = B, 7 = C and so on. So your son is getting a C with three years still to go. Good result, but no so briliiant that he can afford to be lazy!

2007-01-15 13:46:33 · answer #1 · answered by Joe 5 · 0 0

This must be a ratings system the school uses because your son is still in JH. See the link below for the real scoring key.
I am assuming 7 means 7th grade. A 7maybe means at grade level for 7th grade. The school gave you a score without explaining it? What the heck are you suppose to do with that? If you really need to know ask the school for is score relative to other 7th graders( a 80 percentile which says of all 7th graders only 20% ranked higher than the student with a score in the 80 th percentile 80% did worse.) For a 7th grader it may only be important as a measure of grade level proficiency because the test is geared to measure older students.
Do not worry about it until PSAT 11 grade?

2007-01-15 13:57:00 · answer #2 · answered by CAE 5 · 0 1

A level 7 at aged 13 i what the Government would class as 'Beyond Expectations'.

2007-01-15 13:49:26 · answer #3 · answered by katie 3 · 0 0

thats great!! The maximum in science and english you can achieve is a 7 and in maths it's an 8. Congratulate you son!

2007-01-17 08:25:49 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

wow wtf thats well good nice

2007-01-15 13:56:57 · answer #5 · answered by eddy p 1 · 0 0

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