that calculation is approximate
currently you are clear to shoot to 50 yards with a group like that at 25
it has the most to do with height over bore for the calculation
you can run a calculation on the Hornady ballistics calculator and get an idea , but you need to up your shooting game to go past 50 right now.
https://www.hornady.com/4dofwas that group shot standing unsupported or from a bench , prone, across the hood of a truck , ect...
as ZIM pointed out that group doubles at 50 again at 75 and so on
so say we call that 1.5 inches it might be 1.25 but for sake of calculation 1.5
it is 3 inches at 50 yards , 6 inches at 100 yards and 9 inches at 150 yards.
if that was you standing and cutting loose 3 rounds quickly it is one thing but if that was you doing your best rested shooting it is quite another.
If I was a betting man I would say you developed you a flinch if that was rested shooting.
Ball Dummy time
here is the deal , your dad , mom , any trusted safe person is going to take your rifle , they are going to load it place the safety on and lay it back down on the bench or hand it to you carefully , you are handing oof a loaded gun treat it like such , the load will either be a live round or one of your previously fired cases or just empty, I like to use dummy rounds as sometimes a student can hear a empty chamber close vs a round , they do this with their back turned to you so you can not see , you keep your ears on you do not want to know what is in the chamber or not.
also start this off with several dry fires where you make sure not to lie to yourself , did your sights stay on the target through the click...
when you can dry fire keeping sights on target then start ball dummy
they mix it up , you should not be able to guess what is coming next , I like to do around 4-5 dummy's to one ball , it saves ammo and you have no idea when it is coming
they watch you while you shoot , they are watching for the flinch when you pull the trigger on the dummy
anticipating recoil or jerking the trigger is a low left response in right handed shooters.
your job is to identify when you flinch , then you need to learn to just let the recoil hit you , say it doesn't hurt really , just let it hit , force yourself not to flinch , if it is a hard recoiling gun it can be hard after a while. If I don't mind it don't matter is good but at some point your body will say I mind if you are really beating yourself up
PM me I don't recall what part of WI you are in but we might be able to get you to a range if you are not too far away and get a real confirmed zero to 200 yards.