Is there a difference between scoring 90 and 100 in Subject One?
2 Answers
There is no difference between scoring 90 and 100 in Subject One. However, a higher score indicates better mastery of the content. Below are the relevant details: 1. Subject One: Road traffic safety laws, regulations, and related knowledge examination. It is a written test conducted on a computer, with a full score of 100. A score of 90 or above is considered passing (including 90). 2. Subject Two: Field driving skills examination. It involves actual vehicle operation on a designated course and is only graded as pass or fail. The test includes five mandatory items conducted in sequence: reversing into a parking space, parallel parking, S-curve driving, right-angle turning, and hill start and stop. The full score is 100, with 80 or above considered passing (including 80). 3. Subject Three: Road driving skills examination. It involves actual vehicle operation on a road or simulated course, with a full score of 100. For large buses, 90 or above is passing; for large trucks, 80 or above; and for other vehicle types, 70 or above. 4. Subject Four: Knowledge related to safe and civilized driving. It is a written test with a full score of 100, and a score of 90 or above is considered passing (including 90).
There's really no difference in the outcome between scoring 90 or 100 on the Theory Test - both are above the passing mark. But honestly, getting full marks definitely feels more satisfying! Like last time when I took students for their exam, the kid who barely passed with 90 was still worried afterwards about almost failing by one point, while the full-scorer was beaming with pride. But when we got to the Practical Test training ground, their performance didn't match their Theory scores at all - the perfect scorer kept crossing lines during reverse parking, while the 90-pointer picked up skills faster. So I think Theory scores are just theoretical references - actual driving depends on practical skills. 90 is enough to get your foot in the door, no need to stress too much about it.