<p>You can always just take Math240 (Calc3) and if you pass that class with a C or better, you get retroactive credit for Math104 and 114.
For details, see <a href="http://www.math.upenn.edu/%5B/url%5D">http://www.math.upenn.edu/</a></p>
<p>so calc bc replaces calc 104 correct? Do I need to take a placement test to get into calc 114 (I do not have ap credit, but its basically what I am taking right now.)</p>
<p>is calc 104 the same as calc140? cuz when i took a look at their curriculum list, there is not math 104</p>
<p>check the website linked by penn15</p>
<p>Math 140 changed its name to Math 104. Math 141 to Math114.</p>
<p>is there a placement exam for linear algebra?</p>
<p>anyone know the answer to the linear algebra question, and again, approximately what percent of SEAS students get a GPA of 3.7 or better?</p>
<p>call the school, they should know</p>
<p>also, is there grading deflation in penn? Say you get a 95 on a test, but everone else gets 100. Do you get a C for that class or an A?</p>
<p>Most science/engineering classes are graded on a normal curve with C+/B- as the mean. I only know about intro science courses so far, but I think they give A range grades (A- or A) to around the top 20% of students. As for your question, a science class will almost never have a mean in the traditional A range (or B range for that matter). If it did happen, it would just mean the test was too easy, so only really high scores would be A's.</p>
<p>The school would know, but they don't like to give that information out. They think by asking that question, you intend to use the school as a backdoor into Wharton. They want people who want to really be there, attending.</p>