<p>I have a 95.01 GPA on my transcript however for applications and scholarships I need a 4.0 Scale.</p>
<p>Can anyone help me out?</p>
<p>I have a 95.01 GPA on my transcript however for applications and scholarships I need a 4.0 Scale.</p>
<p>Can anyone help me out?</p>
<p>yo dawg, this is hard to do because every school has their own weighting system</p>
<p>but usually all A’s=4
b=3
c=2
d=1 </p>
<p>so just look at your past report cards, if you have all A’s you have 4.0 </p>
<p>but for college you’re going to send your 95 anyway, so it doesn’t matter.</p>
<p>Divide by 25. </p>
<p>95.01/25 = 3.8 on a 4.0 scale</p>
<p>i’ve been wondering this too. do colleges look at each individual course and calculate a 4.0-scale gpa, or just your average? I’m inclined to think the former, because under the latter a 90 could be a 4.0 and a 89 could be a 3.0, so that doesnt seem accurate enough.</p>
<p>so it seems logical if you have all A’s, its a 4.0. if you have a couple B’s, probably a tad lower.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Lol? So your saying a 4.0 translates to having received an 100 in every class since freshman year? Sorry, that’s not the case.</p>
<p>You have to convert each of your class grades into a 4-point scale and then average.</p>
<p>This is the most typical scale:
A+ 4.33 (only used at some schools)
A 4.00
A- 3.67
B+ 3.33
B 3.00
B- 2.67
etcetc</p>
<p>My school, however, operates like this:
93-100 –> A –> 4.0
85-92 –> B –> 3.0
etcetc</p>
<p>@ Jersey13: I assumed that at the OP’s school, a 100 GPA WOULD mean having all A’s (thus 4.0), which is definitely the case for a couple of schools in New York State that I know of.</p>
<p>I don’t understand the 100 grading scale at all.</p>
<p>the 100 grading scale makes a lot more sense than the 4.0 scale…</p>
<p>jsnead: Your GPA is 95.01, I think it’s good score if it’s unweighted if you are in NY. Also I am curious that do you have all of your course score >=90?</p>