Global History & Geography II Regents Score Calculator
Enter your raw points for each section to instantly calculate your scaled score using the official 2D conversion chart.
28 stimulus-based questions × 1 point each = 28 points max
2 CRQ sets × ~3-4 questions each = 7 points max
Essay scored 0-5 on rubric (can include half points)
Enter your points above to see your results!
January 2026 2D Conversion Chart
Find your Parts I+II score on the left, Essay score on top, and the intersection is your final scaled score.
| Parts I+II | 0 | 0.5 | 1 | 1.5 | 2 | 2.5 | 3 | 3.5 | 4 | 4.5 | 5 |
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Tips to Maximize Your Score
Strategic advice to help you pass and earn mastery on the Global History Regents.
Know Key Turning Points
Master major events: Industrial Revolution, World Wars, Cold War, decolonization, and globalization. These appear frequently.
Practice Document Analysis
Use HIPP (Historical context, Intended audience, Purpose, Point of view) to analyze primary sources in CRQ sections.
Master Enduring Issues
Common issues: conflict, power, human rights, nationalism, technology. Practice identifying and explaining significance across time.
Time Management
Budget 45 min for Part I, 30 min for Part II CRQs, and 45 min for the Enduring Issues Essay. Leave time to review.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get answers to the most common questions about the Global History Regents exam.
A passing score is 65 out of 100 on the scaled score. The score is determined using a 2D lookup chart based on your Parts I+II combined score and Essay score.
For Mastery designation (Level 5), you need 85+. This typically requires strong performance on both the MC/CRQ sections and the Enduring Issues Essay.
Part I: 28 MCQ (28 pts), Part II: 7 CRQ points, Part III: Essay scored 0-5. The final score uses a 2D conversion chart combining Parts I+II with Essay score.
You identify an enduring issue (conflict, power, human rights, etc.) from documents, explain its significance, and show how it persisted across different time periods using evidence.
World history from ~1750 to present: Enlightenment, revolutions, imperialism, World Wars, Cold War, decolonization, globalization, and contemporary issues.
Use HIPP: Historical context, Intended audience, Purpose, Point of view. Always connect analysis back to the specific question asked.
No penalty for wrong MCQ answers. Always select an answer—guessing can only help.
Offered three times per year: January, June, and August. Most students take it in June after 10th grade.
Yes! Essay scores can be 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 3.5, 4, 4.5, or 5. The conversion chart accounts for all half-point increments.
This uses the official January 2026 NYSED 2D conversion chart. Your score should match exactly if you enter correct raw scores.