Numerical Grades for GPA

<p>What are the numerical grades that make up an A,A-,B+,B,B-,C+....etc?</p>

<p>A
4 grade points</p>

<p>A-
3.67 grade points</p>

<p>B+
3.33 grade points</p>

<p>B
3 grade points</p>

<p>B-
2.67 grade points</p>

<p>C+
2.33 grade points</p>

<p>C
2 grade points</p>

<p>C-
1.67 grade points</p>

<p>D+
1.33 grade points</p>

<p>D
1 grade point</p>

<p>D-
0.67 grade points</p>

<p>F
0 grade points</p>

<p>i hate this new policy. getting a 4.0 suddenly got significantly harder.</p>

<p>Meh, most of my professors are either not using the +/- system or just not assigning A- 's.</p>

<p>Well all of my professors are. They like it that student’s GPAs will now reflect their real grades.</p>

<p>Are numbers like 95,85,75 on the transcript? Or only A, B, C…</p>

<p>So if theres a teacher who isn’t assigning +/- grades, then how does work when they enter your numerical grade (for example, 90)? I mean according to that professor, you would have an A in class but when UT computes gpas, that is not considered an A. </p>

<p>Can anyone clear that up?</p>

<p>If your professor isn’t doing +/- grading, then you will get an A even if you get a 90 in class. They don’t enter the 90 in the system, they just enter the grade letter so that’s what the University will see.</p>