The high score was 28; actually, the highest scores were 29 and 27.5, but 28 is easier for the math. The median was right on the B/B+ border, and a substantial majority of people who took the test improved their overall test grade for the semester. The top three terms were from Chapter 29 — Cold War, genocide and Holocaust — as was the bottom term, European Union. The most popular term from chapter 30 was renewable energy, which tied chapter 29’s Great Depression for fourth place.
Grade | Minimum | Distribution |
A+ | 28 | |
A | 26.5 | 20% |
A- | 25 | |
B+ | 23 | |
B | 20 | 60% |
B- | 18 | |
C+ | 16 | |
C | 13 | 20% |
C- | 11 | |
D+ | 19 | |
D | 6 | |
D- | 4 | |
F | 0 |
Though a lot of people did choose the Holocaust and genocide, I was not terribly happy with the overall results: there was almost nobody who connected either term to the history of nationalism or racial thinking which we talked about fairly extensively; and the textbook seems to have confused some people on the distinction between genocide — the attempt to eliminate a particular people, of which the Holocaust is one example (and often the only one people cited) — and other atrocities.