<p>I got an 84.674 at the end of my junior year. What's my Gpa and how can I figure it out myself? I'm looking to get all A's my senior year and then go to a public college.</p>
<p>^For just junior year, 84.674*4/100…I don’t know for all 4 ;x.</p>
<p>Thanks. I greatly appreciate it. I thought it was based on some number scale.</p>
<p>no 84.674 is my grade for all three years haha sorry</p>
<p>oh ok, well then I guess I solved your dilemma. :p</p>
<p>@Cackalacky: Why multiply by 4 and divide by 100 when you could just divide by 25?</p>
<p>Because I’m conventional? Who gives a crap? It works either way.</p>
<p>Actually that divide by 25 thing doesn’t work. Think about it, a 50% would be a 2.0. That is obviously not the case. </p>
<p>What’s better is if you know your breakdown by class. Say for one class, you get a 90- that is usually 4.0 or an 85 which is usually a 3.0. So you would add up the 4.0 and the 3.0 and divide it by 2 which equals 3.5.</p>
<p>100-90= 4.0
89-80= 3.0
79-70= 2.0
69-60= 1.0
< 60 = 0.0</p>
<p>Calculate your grades like that. Does that make sense?</p>
<p>^YES! I’ve been stressing this true calculation for the 100 point GPA scale forever!</p>
<p>And you could do what was done above, but it will probably come out to around a 3.00 - maybe a small tad under 3.</p>
<p>^ or ^^ Do colleges see your number grades? If not that isn’t entirely relevant in this case, because I’ve seen my Frosh/Soph Transcript and it just had letter grades on it (some bad ones that would be better in other schools)</p>
<p>^Colleges see whatever your transcript shows them. My hs had grades and then a GPA, but no 100-point scale thing.</p>