GRE General Test scores are accepted at thousands of graduate schools, including business and law, as well as departments and divisions within these schools. Here are the lists of schools that accept GRE General Test scores.
If you read your local newspaper, you might have seen an article about someone from your area getting a perfect score on an AP exam. But what is an AP test perfect score, and how is it different from a 5?
The Perfect Score DVDRip
If you earn a perfect score on an AP exam, that means that you received every point possible on the exam. In other words, you answered every multiple-choice question correctly and scored the maximum amount of points on every free-response question. That's pretty impressive!
How does this relate to the score you get from 1-5? Well, if you get a perfect score, you'll definitely get a 5 on the exam. But your 5 won't be worth more than anyone else's 5. Additionally, you don't need to get anything close to a perfect score to get a 5 on the exam.
When a student achieves a perfect score, the College Board usually informs the school directly in the fall. The school then informs the student. This often seems to lead to a level of minor local celebrity, with perfect scorers frequently being interviewed by local newspapers and having articles written about them on school websites.
As mentioned above, the perfect score doesn't appear on your AP score report, but it's certainly something worth reporting to colleges if it does happen because it's so impressive and unusual.
However, a series of tweets by the College Board's head of AP, Trevor Packer, revealed all the info about how many students got perfect scores in 2022. I've assembled the info into a chart that shows how many perfect scores there were by number and by percentage of test takers in 2022, as well as the percentage of test takers who earned a 5 in each exam.
As you can see, while at least 5% of test takers scored a 5 on each AP exam, the perfect scores are teeny, teeny, teeny percentages. The only exams with a percentage of perfect scorers higher than 1% were AP Research and Studio Art Drawing. Studio Art Drawing had the highest percentage of perfect scorers, with about 1.78% receiving a perfect score. And nearly all other AP exams had a much smaller percentage of perfect scorers than that.
Given how few students get them, it's not a very attainable or realistic goal to actively try for a perfect score on an AP exam, even on a test for which perfect scores are marginally more common.
In terms of test scores, it makes much more sense to work on getting top marks on your standardized college entrance exams like the SAT or ACT. Any solid preparation work you put in there will pay off in your reported scores, unlike on an AP exam, for which you'll either get a perfect score or never find out your raw score.
However, I don't recommend making a perfect score your goal, simply because the benefits as opposed to getting a 5 are only marginal. Ultimately, you'd be much better served working for perfect marks on the SAT or ACT.
Want to improve your SAT score by 160 points or your ACT score by 4 points? We've written a guide for each test about the top 5 strategies you must be using to have a shot at improving your score. Download it for free now:
In Q4 of 2020, CSM Practice synthesized its survey results from close to 200 of US-Based SAAS companies. The purpose of the survey was to assess the validity of common industry assumptions on customer health scores. It also sought to understand the major trends of customer health scores.
According to the survey results, customer health scores are mostly used by large customer success teams. It is more common to be developed and maintained by SaaS companies with CSM to customer ratio of 60 or less. To add, the said ratio is where a higher-touch engagement model is prevailing.
However, maintaining a customer health score allows customer success teams to achieve clarity of roles and the ability to scale. The survey results demonstrate that by adopting the use of a customer health score, a customer success manager has better clarity of mission and goals.
Surprisingly, the survey results show there is no clear correlation between customer health score and revenue from upsell/ add-ons sales. Moreover, the correlation analysis result revealed no direct connection between a lower churn rate and the use of customer health scores.
CSM Practice found that the lowest churn rates were achieved by those who are using a customer success software/CRM application. This conclusion is regardless of whether they maintained a customer health score or not.
To be specific, CSM Practice found that 46% maintain a customer health score to forecast churn or renewals. Contrarily, only 1% of companies only maintain customer health to benchmark against a best-in-class customer and overall ROI.
Finally, any changes in the market, like trends and customer usage, may require revisiting the customer health score. Irit Eizips, CEO of CSM Practice, expands on best practices in building the customer health model featuring Ben Winn, from Catalyst.
There are several benefits of revisiting the formula of health score. Conversely, survey results revealed that 26% never update their customer health score algorithm. Nearly, 48% update their customer health score algorithm annually, while 26% update the health score algorithm as often as quarterly.
The customer health score should serve as a benchmark tool that helps your customer success manager understand how each customer advances towards becoming the best in class. Your customer success team will become more proactive by shifting the focus of customer health score on empowering customers.
The development and maintenance of a customer health score are complicated. Yet, we are hopeful that our survey results provide you information to help you become a world-class Customer Success organization. We are confident this will help you build-out, calculate, and maintain the perfect customer health score.
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The Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) is a method used to supply a qualitative measure of severity. CVSS is not a measure of risk. CVSS consists of three metric groups: Base, Temporal, and Environmental. The Base metrics produce a score ranging from 0 to 10, which can then be modified by scoring the Temporal and Environmental metrics. A CVSS score is also represented as a vector string, a compressed textual representation of the values used to derive the score. Thus, CVSS is well suited as a standard measurement system for industries, organizations, and governments that need accurate and consistent vulnerability severity scores. Two common uses of CVSS are calculating the severity of vulnerabilities discovered on one's systems and as a factor in prioritization of vulnerability remediation activities. The National Vulnerability Database (NVD) provides CVSS scores for almost all known vulnerabilities.
The NVD supports both Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) v2.0 and v3.X standards. The NVD provides CVSS 'base scores' which represent the innate characteristics of each vulnerability. The NVD does not currently provide 'temporal scores' (metrics that change over time due to events external to the vulnerability) or 'environmental scores' (scores customized to reflect the impact of the vulnerability on your organization). However, the NVD does supply a CVSS calculator for both CVSS v2 and v3 to allow you to add temporal and environmental score data.
NVD provides qualitative severity ratings of "Low", "Medium", and "High" for CVSS v2.0 base score ranges in addition to the severity ratings for CVSS v3.0 as they are defined in the CVSS v3.0 specification.
With some vulnerabilities, all of the information needed to create CVSS scores may not be available. This typically happens when a vendor announces a vulnerability but declines to provide certain details. In such situations, NVD analysts assign CVSS scores using a worst case approach. Thus, if a vendor provides no details about a vulnerability, NVD will score that vulnerability as a 10.0 (the highest rating).
NVD staff are willing to work with the security community on CVSS impact scoring. If you wish to contribute additional information or corrections regarding the NVD CVSS impact scores, please send email to nvd@nist.gov. We actively work with users that provide us feedback.
Vector strings for the CVE vulnerabilities published between to 11/10/2005 and 11/30/2006 have been upgraded from CVSS version 1 data. CVSS v1 metrics did not contain granularity of CVSS v2 and so these scores are marked as "Version 2.0 upgrade from v1.0" within NVD. While these scores are approximation, they are expected to be reasonably accurate CVSSv2 scores.
WIDA provides sample score reports, guides for understanding them, rubrics to connect results with instructional plans, and other resources to engage with families about what it all means. Every year, individual states set their own testing and score reporting timelines. Visit your member/state page to learn when students will test and when you can expect score reports. 2ff7e9595c
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