Skip to main content

What Happens If I Don't Get a Satisfactory Score on the Final Exam?

If you don't achieve a satisfactory score on the final exam, the system provides feedback on your incorrect answers and you can retake the exam.

What Happens If I Don't Get a Satisfactory Score on the Final Exam?

If you do not achieve a satisfactory score on the final exam, the system provides detailed feedback on your incorrect answers — explaining the correct answer and the reasoning behind it. You are encouraged to review this feedback and retake the exam.

How It Works

  • The exam is automatically graded immediately upon submission

  • For any question answered incorrectly, the system explains the correct answer and why

  • You review the feedback and then retake the exam

  • The exam draws 10 questions from a bank of 50, so questions may vary between attempts

  • Once you achieve a satisfactory score, your certificate is issued promptly

Why the Feedback Matters

The course is designed to ensure you understand the material before completing. The feedback on incorrect answers is there to help you learn the content, not just select the right answer.

Quick Facts

Detail

Information

If score not satisfactory

Review feedback and retake

Feedback provided

Yes — correct answer and rationale explained for each wrong answer

Exam retake

Available after reviewing feedback

Questions per attempt

10 (drawn from a bank of 50 — may vary)

Certificate

Issued promptly upon satisfactory score

Frequently Asked Questions

How many times can I retake the exam? You can retake the exam until you achieve a satisfactory score. Let us know if you are having ongoing difficulty and we can help.

Will I get the same questions if I retake? Not necessarily. The exam is built dynamically from a bank of 50 questions, so the questions presented may differ between attempts.

Does retaking the exam affect my certificate? No. Your certificate reflects completion of the course. The number of attempts does not appear on the certificate and has no bearing on its validity.

Did this answer your question?