Default Setup Used
The U.S. Government preset uses a 55-point multiple-choice section, a 17-point free-response total, and an even 50/50 section split. If your practice source scales written responses differently, change the FRQ max before reading the estimate.
- MCQ raw max: 55 points
- FRQ raw max: 17 points
- Default weight: 50% multiple choice and 50% free response
How to Read the Estimate
U.S. Government estimates are most useful when you separate content recall from task execution. A student may know a concept but lose free-response points for missing a comparison, evidence explanation, or required case connection.
Before You Enter Scores
Use the number of correct multiple-choice answers and the total free-response points earned from a rubric. If you practiced only one FRQ type, use the estimate as a focused diagnostic instead of a full score prediction.
Study Moves After the Estimate
If MCQ is weak, review foundational documents, landmark cases, institutions, and political behavior vocabulary. If FRQ is weak, practice claim-evidence-reasoning, argument structure, and precise use of course terms.
Use One Consistent Score Source
A U.S. Government estimate is most useful when the multiple-choice and free-response scores come from one timed practice exam or from sets that reflect the same level of difficulty. Government practice can vary because some sources focus on vocabulary, while others require applying required documents, court cases, data, and political concepts. If you combine different sources, keep the estimate as a diagnostic rather than a firm score projection.
Enter raw earned free-response points after checking the task requirements. A response may name a correct concept but still lose credit if it does not compare, explain, support an argument, or connect the evidence to the prompt. When a teacher provides a percentage instead of raw points, use the adjustment panel only if the point maximum is known. Otherwise, record the result separately and avoid comparing it directly with full-exam estimates.
How Borderline Results Should Guide Review
If the estimate is near a threshold, identify whether missed points are factual, analytical, or procedural. Factual misses might involve required cases, foundational documents, institutions, or amendments. Analytical misses often involve using the right term but failing to explain its effect. Procedural misses happen when a response answers only part of a multi-step FRQ.
For borderline results, review one FRQ at the task level. Underline every command word and match your answer to each required action. If the calculator shows that only a few composite points separate you from the next range, fixing incomplete task responses may be more valuable than broad rereading. If the gap is larger, combine FRQ practice with unit review.
Build a Repeatable Practice Record
Record the source, MCQ correct, FRQ points, estimated score, weakest unit, and most common task error. Keep required documents and Supreme Court cases in their own category. Over time, this record will show whether the estimate is rising because course knowledge improved or because written responses became more complete and precise.
When to Run the Calculator Again
Run another estimate after a fresh practice sample that includes both concept questions and rubric-scored writing. U.S. Government students often review required cases or documents in isolation, which is useful, but a narrow drill does not show the whole score range. The retest should include application, data, argument, and concept explanation whenever possible.
After the retest, compare the task errors. If incomplete FRQ commands still cost points, practice underlining the command words before answering. If required cases are still weak, build a case-to-principle chart and retest later. The calculator is most useful when the next estimate confirms that a specific review action changed the result.
Also note whether the practice source emphasized institutions, civil liberties, political participation, or public policy. A balanced retest should rotate through units so the estimate does not depend on one comfortable part of the course or one memorized document set.