<p>My school is based on a percentile system and I would like to know how the numbers translate on a 4.0 scale. (I know this is different depending on the school, but still, I'm curious.)</p>
<p>You have a 4.0 if your semester grade in every class was over 90%.</p>
<p>For my school 97+ equals 4.0</p>
<p>A=4
B=3
C=2
D=1
+=+.3
-=-.3</p>
<p>so an A- is a 3.7, a C+ is a 2.3, etc.</p>
<p>add the grades for each class together (at my school, it's final, not trimester, in the case of multi-term classes) and divide by the number of classes (take the average, duh).</p>
<p>Would you say you have 4.0 if your WEIGHTED grade is greater than or equal to 4?</p>
<p>^ I would not, since different schools have different weighting systems.</p>
<p>I think the standard for a 4.0 (on the collegeboard thingy) is a 95 average. (not sure if weighted)</p>
<p>what college board thing? post link plz =D</p>
<p>I can't find it now. I'll look tomorrow harder. I think it was on some kind of survey or questionnaire you had to fill out for college something or other or for SAT.</p>
<p>4.0 = 100 unweighted in my school : |...</p>
<p>just...divide by 25.</p>
<p>No one has it.</p>
<p>Ours sucks...4.0=100, 3.9=99, 3.8=98, down to about 3.3, where it gets a little more complicated. It sucks.</p>