Am I a "straight-A" student?

<p>Hi, my school doesn't grade us according to As and Bs but I have a question, If I have a 95+ in every class then am I a straight-A student?</p>

<p>What do you think?</p>

<p>yes thats straight A's but what if you have 92+? is that considered an A? and what numbers do u assign to each grade on a standard 4.0 gpa scale: 90-100 A?
80-90 B?</p>

<p>Pretty much, yea.</p>

<p>Supposedly 92.5 in my school is an A. so 95+ for every class is a straight-A Student. Don't worry. you'll be fine if you have 95+ in EVERY class.</p>

<p>I must say that your grades are PATHETIC. I AM NOT JOKING. Seriously, if you think these caps are sarcastic they are not. A 3.8 is horrible. You will never be acceptable to me ever. I would bribwdfrfdgtert ty gfredfre your teachers if I were you</p>

<p>Yes, you are a straight-A student. :rolleyes:</p>

<p>Wait...so a 95 converts to a 3.8 GPA?
That's messed up..I have to fight for every damn point while others get 4.0s without much effort?</p>

<p>GPA != Aptitude</p>

<p>this thread = proof!</p>

<p>seriously, if an adcom sees 95+ he/she will probably regard you as a straight A student</p>

<p>Alright thanks...I just wish my school gave ot As and Bs instead of 95s and 98s, it makes it harder to fight for a rank...</p>

<p>obviously, the 4.0 system and the 100 system are different
my GPA is 97.7/100, which would mean 3.908/4.0
but i've seen people on CC with 3.8's that have a whole lot of B+'s and A-'s. The weighting also works differently. In my school, APs are weighted as 1.1 X actual grade...so 100 would be averaged in as 110. Obviously a different system is used among those who report 5.3 weighted GPAs which would be 132.5/100. With all my APs, my 97+ grades in all my APs, my weighted average comes out to about 99.5/100</p>

<p>as you can see its a different system.</p>

<p>At my school, if you have all A's it's a 4.0</p>

<p>If you have like.. all A's and one B it's a 3.8ish.</p>

<p>etc. etc. etc.</p>

<p>our school:
90+=4
80-90=3
70-80=2
60-70=1
0-59=0</p>

<p>honor/AP gets 1 additional point (i.e. an A in chem is 4 pts, but an A in chem AP is 5 pts)</p>

<p>add the pts for all your classes and then divide by the # of classes you have and you should get your weighted GPA</p>

<p>Unless you are in one of those schools that don't count A- and A the same or 92 and below is a B, It's a 4.0</p>

<p>aha i see.
so that would mean 1/3 of my class of 750 have 4.0+
doesnt that cause problems in many schools...theres so little discrepancy between GPA's...</p>