well, i just read wikipedia and your right it is almost verbatim, hell, maybe the information that was given to me was just blowing smoke up my ass, and to give me vague results. Either way I passed and I'll help others in any way I can. As for the score. He did not give me the exact number, but he did support everyones theory that the passing score is around 50% raw. I asked if this was true and he said give or take. Stated something along the lines of it was just shy of 50% this past year if he recalled correctly and some years it's a smidge over. Now that being said, he gave no value of what exactly it was, and he did keep everything very vague and didn't give much more info than what NCEES has given. All he did was put it in a dumbed down version to help me grasp what the hell they were trying to say. All in All the gentlemen who posted above came real close if his calculations are correct. But I didn't want him thinking that 50% was a mark to shoot for when apparently it fluctuates a few percent every test. It's not like it's a set scale they go off of every test, and they do equate it from something, so it probably is the first exam.As for the state thing. I see your point but I'm not sure it works like that. National or higher chained organizations like NCEES have a higher level to set the bare minimum for the nation as a whole. From there the states may fluctuate to adjust it according by raising the score. Other wise you would have states that would argue that by having states dip below a min passing score that it would be unethical. I just can't see states ever going below the national minimum avg. I can see them rasing the bar, but not below. Like in the Army for instance. At Fort Drum where I was stationed from 2000-2004, it the division made a rule or standard, all below had to follow, but at the brigade level the standard could be raised but not lowered. And at battalion the brigades standard had to be followed not the divisions because it was higher. That might be confusing to some, so look at it like this.
The US government is made up of states. so in turn it is a National Council made up of states. If the federal government states that max speed limit on a certain highway is 65mph. No state can go above that speed limit. However if a state wishes they can make the max speed on a highway 55 mph. In short, they can add to, but not take away. I believe that is most likely the case NCEES and state boards as well.