<p>I just finished my Junior year of High School. my gpa for the 3 years i've been there is a 91.21 How do I convert this with the 4.0 scale or does anyone know what it is exactly when converted? Thankyou.</p>
<p>If you go to the princeton review website and do a collegesearch thing, it asks you for your GPA and has a conversion chart.</p>
<p>BTW: I think that is a 3.5</p>
<p>Im looking all over I don't see anything isn't there somewhere else?</p>
<p>I was looking on google a few days ago and I didn't find anything. If you go to princeton review's counselor o matic, that's where u will find it.</p>
<p>your GPA is exactly 3.6484</p>
<p>91.21/100*4.0 = 3.6484.</p>
<p>Here's what I don't understand about that conversion chart- usually, the way to calculate GPA is just based on letter grades, which is all my school has on the transcript. So even if I had a 94 in a class, that factors in as an A, a 4.0. How is the Princeton review method fair then? At these schools where GPAs are done on an 100 pt scale, is it easier to get an 100 or 99? Because in terms of the number grades at my school, to get an 100 for a marking period would mean that you couldn't have gotten a single thing wrong for the entire mp, which is ridiculous. We often have assignments, usually essays, given only a letter grade, for which an A (we have no A+) is automatically a 95.</p>
<p>Do you have a numerical grade for each class? If so it will be easier to calculate a true GPA.</p>
<p>3.121</p>
<p>That's what it would have been at my highschool.</p>
<p>"91.21/100*4.0 = 3.6484."</p>
<p>That's not the way you'd convert to GPA... if you did it that way, a 50% would be a 2.0!</p>
<p>My school's report card only had numbers for the grades and not letters. Im going to check today if they have it in another form. A 91 is considered an A right?</p>
<p>A 91 is not an "A".</p>
<p>If you were in college on a 4.0 scale you would have an A- which would place you anywhere between a 3.66 and 3.7.</p>
<p>Get a copy of your high school profile because no matter how much calculating you do, you will be evaluated according to the grading system at your school.</p>
<p>On some scales a 91 would be an A becuase some schools don't care for +/- when calculating GPA (Michigan does this).</p>
<p>However, Sybbie is right, the cut off for an A is a 93, A- 90, B+ 87. Here's a standard scale you could use.</p>
<p>A+ 100+ 4.000
A 93+ 4.000
A- 90-93 3.666
B+ 87-90 3.333
B 83-87 3.000
B- 80-83 2.666
C+ 77-80 2.333
C 73-77 2.000
C- 70-73 1.666</p>
<p>Each school is different on this. Unless there's no such thing as letter grades at your school, you should know what the cutoff is. My school had 93-100 as an A, 85-92 as a B, etc. But this was well known and everything was based off it. If your school isn't calculating GPA on a 4.0 scale, I wouldn't be concerned with a need to do it.</p>
<p>Im international, and have only six subjects at my school (without sports). NOTHIN ELSE! and how can I calculate my GPA? I finished my Junior year, so i have grades of my three years of study.</p>
<p>Easiest way, and how most schools do it is 4.0 = 95, 3.9=94, 3.8=93, 3.7=92, and so on and so forth so if u have a 94.99999999, u'd have 3.9999999. And yes eric i am stalking u.</p>