<p>For some reason, the teachers at my school just don't give A+'s. Like in my history class, it's a 200% to get an A+ haha.</p>
<p>At my school an A is a 94 to 100 percent, and they are considered equal as far as report cards and GPA go. So there’s no official A+, but if a teacher really liked your work they’ll write that on your paper anyway.</p>
<p>We don<code>t have A+</code>s. 94-100 is an A. No -, regular, or +</p>
<p>No. An A is from 94-100. Then, we have A minuses and B pluses and B minuses and so on, but just no A plus. No rounding either. Last year in English I had a 93.935 and I still got an A-.</p>
<p>What grade is an A+ for those of you whose schools do give them?</p>
<p>huh A+ is basically 100%. It pretty rare but you can get one on your report cards if you’re the “perfect student”.</p>
<p>At our school, an A+ is a 97-100. I got two last quarter, one in AP World (a 97) and one in Latin IV (100) - they’re really hard to maintain… I’ve always had the feeling that teachers aren’t exactly fond of the idea of giving students “perfect” grades.</p>
<p>We do get A+, but they don’t show up on report cards, that’s all.</p>
<p>Yeah they all do. 97-100. I have two: USB and AP Euro (which I’m really proud of because no one else has higher than a B+)</p>
<p>Well, teachers don’t give A+'s (97-100) on assignments, but since everything has a point value, a teacher that rarely assigns major things such as essays can end up with tons of kids having A+'s, if they got a 10/10 or whatever on classwork.</p>
<p>Mostly, people end up with the delightfully trollish 96.</p>
<p>We can earn A+'s but they count as 4 points, the same as A- and A (this is ignoring weigh).</p>
<p>A 98-100 is an A+ at my school. I wish 97’s were A+'s as well because it’s really hard to only miss 2 points or fewer out of 100 on average.</p>
<p>At my school, there is no “+” or “-”. A 90 to 100 is an A, 80 to 89 is B, and so on. They only do numerical grades with assignments.</p>
<p>At my school, an A- is a 90-94% range, and an A is 95-100%. No A+'s here.</p>