It was everyone guessing what the "curve" would be on the test which here is represented by the number of questions you could get wrong and still get a 170. It turned out to be a -12 "curve" so you could get 89 out of 101 and get a 170.
@runiggyrun agreed. And @"Grey Warden" just breath and take some time to internalize the concept. Don't sweat it. I think if a question like this appeared on the LSAT it would be one of the curve-breaker questions.
@DumbHollywoodActor Sorry. I didn't mean to imply that one should use the negation test, but just that something needed to account for the set of problems that were govt. created. Luckily @runiggyrun explained it well.
I thought the test was really hard compared to all of the practice test I have been taking. I am hoping it was hard for everyone and it will reflect in the curve. Otherwise Ill be back in June
No--you are just given a score. You will never know how many you missed section by section, nor what the correct answers were, nor will we ever know the curve. You get a score and a percentile and that is all.