<p>Not all schools use letters and the 4.0 scale, i was wondering when looking at applicants, would a school rather see a 4.0, or say a 100? a 95 or a 3.75? Just something that i have been thinking about...</p>
<p>since when has a 95 been a 3.75… i thought it would be higher… haha and probably 4.0</p>
<p>but wouldnt a 4.0 mean all A+s, allowing them to not get straight 100s? Also, what would a 95 be then?</p>
<p>not sure, i use this chart (idk why prob because it was first to come up when i googled it haha) and it says 95-100 is 4.0</p>
<p>[GPA</a> Conversion Chart](<a href=“http://inquiry.princetonreview.com/leadgentemplate/GPA_popup.asp]GPA”>Calculate Your GPA With Our GPA Scale | The Princeton Review)</p>
<p>Strange, so if my GPA for schools is a 96, does that give me a 4.0?</p>
<p>4.3 is all straight pluses I think. 4.0 is all A’s, or an occasional A-(3.7) which is compensated with an A+ (4.3). That’s why you see people on CC with unweighted 4.1 GPAs.</p>
<p>my school uses a different scale. an A is 4.00, but an A+ is 4.33 and a A- is 3.67. So essentially subtract .33 for every lower level. Then honors classes are A+ 4.83, A - 4.5, A - 4.17 so they are inflated by .5. Then APs are A+ 5.33, A - 5, A - 4.67 so they are inflated by 1. Fs are 0s for all of them though.</p>
<p>wait but what if your school only puts a letter on your transcript. like if you get a 94, it’s an A. would it be a 4.0 or a 3.9 according to your chart?</p>
<p>we don’t A+ or A- at my school
just a plain ole A</p>