<p>I am applying for internships. I was wondering if one should include their current GPA, just their undergrad GPA or both on their resume?</p>
<p>If it's good, then why not put it on?</p>
<p>I've been told that if it's above 3.0 to put it down, if not, don't. However, after you finish your undergrad up, take it off, the degree will trump the GPA.</p>
<p>I've been told sometimes to include it...other times not to include it. Opinions have run the gamut from "anything above 3.0 is necessary" to "GPA on a resume is egregious." </p>
<p>Sorry to be less-than-helpful. Just my observations.</p>
<p>I've been told if one GPA is not good then include another. For example let's say you have a 2.8 but you have a 3.4 in your major classes include your major GPA. Or let's say you're applying for a science/engineering internship include your science/engineering GPA</p>
<p>I was told by a career services person at my grad school that a GPA lower than 3.8 (!) should not be included on a resume. I wondered about this. But when I worked in a consulting firm and on the hiring side saw resumes with 3.2 GPAs come in, I pretty much wrote the person off. And that's when I realized the career services person was right. If it's not thoroughly impressive, don't include it. If they need to know it, they can ask. If it's not really impressive, it works against you, probably.</p>
<p>Incredulous maybe because in grad schools anything < 3.7 is really not impressive at all. Wouldn't you put a 3.6 undergrad GPA on your resume?</p>