<p>I heard some universities, after you transfer to them, give students 2 GPA's after graduation; GPA at the old university upon transferring (transferrable GPA), and the GPA at the new university until graduation. </p>
<p>When looking for a job/internship/co-op, is it good to only put the higher GPA of the two on a resume or do they require both?</p>
<p>Or do some companies take the average of the two or pick the higher one?</p>
<p>I’ve never heard of a university reporting two GPAs. Do you have an example of this?</p>
<p>Generally you put your current school with your GPA for the classes you took at that school by it, and if you want to add, you can put your previous school with the GPA for the classes you took at that school next to it. Don’t combine them in any sort of form. Companies, if they care, will only care about the current university.</p>
<p>Ok. Thanks.</p>
<p>For example University of Texas at Austin, for transfer students after graduation they have their transfer GPA and their UT Austin GPA (only classes taken at UT Austin).</p>
<p>I had 40 credits transfer in from my previous community college but the gpa of that college did not add to my University gpa only the weight of the transfer credits applied. In your transcripts im pretty sure it shows both Gpa’s though</p>
<p>I’m sure it only matters what the GPA for the Bachelor’s Degree was.</p>
<p>Ok. Thanks for the answers.</p>