RNCP Score Estimator
Use this unofficial tool to estimate your RNCP readiness based on common evaluation blocks (0 to 100).
Weighting used: B1 20%, B2 20%, B3 15%, B4 15%, Internship 15%, Jury 15%.
What is a 42 RNCP calculator?
A 42 RNCP calculator is a planning tool that helps students estimate whether their current performance is likely to meet RNCP-level expectations. Instead of waiting for final outcomes, you can model your current progress and identify where to focus your effort.
How the calculation works
The calculator combines six score areas into one weighted percentage. This gives a single “readiness score” that is easy to track over time.
Pass logic used by this estimator
- Global threshold: weighted score must meet or exceed your target (default 70%).
- Minimum block requirement: each category should be at least 50% to avoid weak-point failure.
- Out of 20 view: score is also displayed as a /20 equivalent for quick comparison.
How to use this tool effectively
- Collect realistic scores from your latest assessments, peer reviews, project feedback, and mock defense results.
- Enter each value carefully (0 to 100).
- Run the calculation and check both your weighted score and weak categories.
- Recalculate after each sprint or milestone to track improvement.
How to improve your RNCP estimate quickly
1) Raise your lowest block first
If one block is below 50%, improving it can matter more than increasing already-strong categories.
2) Prepare for the final jury early
The oral defense and project narrative often move the final result. Practice explanation clarity, architecture decisions, and trade-offs.
3) Convert activity into evidence
Document outcomes, not just effort: technical decisions, test strategy, deployment quality, team contribution, and impact.
Frequently asked questions
Is this an official 42 RNCP grading tool?
No. It is a practical estimator to support your preparation and decision-making.
Can I change the target?
Yes. Set any target between 0 and 100, then recalculate.
Why do I pass globally but still get a warning?
You may have an acceptable weighted average but one or more categories below the minimum block threshold.