<p>4.2!!!! 17 Math/Physics/General credits</p>
<p>but that makes only 3.7 CGPA</p>
<p>4.2!!!! 17 Math/Physics/General credits</p>
<p>but that makes only 3.7 CGPA</p>
<p>there's waited GPA at cornell?</p>
<p>For A+, you get 4.3</p>
<p>wow, fantastic jerew!</p>
<p>I got As across the board (Chem, Computer Science, Spanish, Writing)...except a C+ in MATH 102. (One bad exam just killed me)</p>
<p>So I ended up with just over a 3.6 .....</p>
<p>No big deal, since I'm pleased with all my other grades, and considering they gave a quarter of the class a below a C-.</p>
<p>i'm taking even more credits next semester, but i'm predicting a much easier time without ILRCB 201. Heavens, that class was more work than all of my others combined. It was the best class I took, though.</p>
<p>4.15 for the semester (statistics, business mgmt, macro, seminar, random fdsc class), 4.10 overall.</p>
<p>No, I don't study all day, I'm just in AEM and most of my classes are a complete joke.</p>
<p>And of course, Pedro Perez messed up my grade, what else is new. I'll have to get that changed.</p>
<p>Schedule so far for next semester:</p>
<p>AEM 221 (financial accounting)
AEM 240 (marketing)
AEM 241 (marketing plan development), if i get in
NTRES 332 (some random humanities ethics course)
PAM 200 (intermediate micro theory)
HADM 422 (Taxation and Mgmt Decisions), maybe</p>
<p>Should be interesting.</p>
<p>Well at least you're honest :)</p>
<p>So...does the weighted GPA show up on your transcript? I guess that puts even more pressure on students so that they not only strive to achieve A's, but also A+'s!</p>
<p>It's not a weighted GPA. A+'s are 4.3's. That's your normal GPA.</p>
<p>weighted or not, the standard is usually a 4.0. Are you saying that straight A's will show up as a 4.0/4.3 on your transcript?</p>
<p>Cornell counts A+'s as 4.3's.</p>
<p>Nothing will show up on your transcript because your GPA (semester or cumulative) is not listed on your transcript. They will just list your grades and whatever entity receives the transcript can calculate for themselves. For example, if you're applying for med school, AMCAS counts all A+'s as 4.0 only.</p>
<p>Whoops, misunderstood your question. </p>
<p>Straight A's=4.0</p>
<p>Straight A+'s=4.3</p>
<p>Thanks for the clarification</p>