<p>Our's is 4.32.</p>
<p>Yayaya 400th post!</p>
<p>Our's is 4.32.</p>
<p>Yayaya 400th post!</p>
<p>Highest possible is 4.945, if you took all AP classes and got A+'s in all of them.</p>
<p>APs get a multiplier of 1.15 and
A+ = 4.3
A = 4.0
A- = 3.7
etc.</p>
<p>Theoretically, I suppose you could get a 4.3 or 4.4 out of 4.0 at my school.</p>
<p>But in reality, the best anyone does is 4.2, since getting above that would require taking the bare minimum of non-AP classes.</p>
<p>For our school, A+ in honors or AP = 5.4. An A+ in a regular class is a 4.4. Our valedictorian usually has around a 5.0-5.1</p>
<p>Probably about a 4.7 or 4.8, but it's basically unheard of have above a 4.4 or a 4.5. AP and Accelerated classes are weighted at 5.0, Honors at 4.5, Regular at 4.0. We require at least two non-AP/honors classes each year, and there are basically no honors/accelerated/AP classes available for freshman, which pulls down a lot of kids' cumulative GPA.</p>
<p>5.0 weighted is highest at my school. it can only be achieved by taking the minimum 5 classes and all must be AP's. i got it both semester this year and was the first one at my school to do it.</p>
<p>theoretically
freshmen all honors
sophomore one AP(don't allow any more)
junior 4 APs
senior 7 APs
4.2
but usually it's a little over 4.0 or close to 4.1</p>
<p>In theory, 7.0.
In practice, around 6.7.
<a href="grade%20deflation%20at%20work...">i</a>*</p>
<p>edit: That's unweighted, by the way. IB HLs are weighted but I'm not sure how much.</p>
<p>Most advanced schedule at my school:</p>
<p>No AP's until 11th and 12th....2 max per year.</p>
<p>4.00 X 4 semesters (freshman, sophomore)
4.29 X 4 semesters (junior, senior years with 2 APs and A's in them)</p>
<p>Max possible GPA: 4.15.</p>
<p>Just 4.0. There's an extreme problem with grade inflation, though - this graduating class has 18 valedictorians because of it. A lot of people are advocating a system that weighs honors and/or AP classes, or outside achievement.</p>
<p>4.0</p>
<p>Because according to our superintendent "weighing grades would make the less academically inclined students feel left behind."</p>
<p>Weighted from 9-12- If one were to take the 10 AP classes (which means you have to be a year ahead in science before entering the school bc seniors can only take one of the two ap sciences and also you would have to take Spanish Lit) a person could get 4.3125. I'll be around probably a 4.229 (8 AP's proably and 2 stupid B's in AP Spanish Lang).</p>
<p>The highest in our school would be a 4.675, since honors and APs are weighted the same. Valedictorian usuallly gets about a 4.6</p>
<p>the highest at my school is 4.0.
For APs, you only get a .05 add-on. I believe our school only has 10 AP classes, so I guess you theoretically could get a 4.5 or so, but that means getting straight A's in every single class you've taken, plus taking all three languages (French, Spanish, and Latin (if there is one)). I honestly don't think anyone in our school has ever done that.</p>
<p>Around 5.4 - 5.5ish</p>
<p>The top 10 kids normally have around 4.6-4.7... unless you take an abnormal number of APs which in that case you could pull it up a bit. The way our schedule is, you can't take that many APs unless you really make an effort to double up early on.</p>
<p>4.0</p>
<p>However, for purposes of class rank, we are weighted on the 100-point scale. Beginning next year, honors classes have a max of 103, AP classes a max of 105. It was previously honors were out of 100 points like standard, and AP classes were up to 108.
Because the number of APs offered shifts from year to year, not sure what the highest theoretical GPA is. The highest average anyone has made in the past five years was 100.333.</p>
<p>Theoretically, the highest GPA at my school approaches (but does not reach) 5.0 due to the limitless dual enrollment classes one could potentially take. What's actually possible is probably around a 4.85.</p>
<p>I think the sky is the limit.</p>
<p>4.0 was the highest at mine.</p>