<p>Only your p/np shows up, the letter grade does not.</p>
<p>plus you don't have to declare a class pass/not pass until a few weeks into the semester so you can decide based on how you're doing in the beginning of that class</p>
<p>so if one gets a pass, that doesn't get figured into your GPA calculation?</p>
<p>right - i mean there is no number represented by a p</p>
<p>I am currently a 3rd year undergrad Architecture major student In Berkeley, and I want to know if there is a “limit” on how many P/NP courses one can take without having it look bad on the transcript.</p>
<p>I have also take 4 De cal courses in the past (I even taught one actually) and I was wondering if grad schools will look upon those P/NP grades negatively, even though they are only DECALS. I actually received an NP on one of them due to complications, i even petitioned for it, but it didn’t work out and now there’s an ugly NP on my transcript from a DECAL class I took freshmen year. :[</p>
<p>I have also taken a music course to fulfill one of my lower div requirements and I got a P on it, I just recently changed one of my upp div Landscape course so I can focus on the other classes that actually count towards my major (that class doesn’t really necessary fulfill my requirements towards my major), I was wondering if I made the right choice by taking it P/NP. </p>
<p>I have an above 3.0 GPA, I kind of realized there are quite a few P/NP courses on my transcript (even 1 NP), and I am scared that grad schools will dislike it.</p>