<p>I know that colleges do it for High School seniors, but what about for college transfer students? At my school, an "A" is a 93-100, which equals a 4.0, whereas at schools like NYU, an "A" is only a 3.7 and an "A+" is a 97-100, which equals a 4.0. I got many A's and only one A+. My point is that if my gpa is recalculated according to these standards, my gpa will drop by about .13 points to around a 3.60. So, the main question: do colleges, specifically NYU, recalculate GPAs of college students when they apply for transfer admissions?????</p>
<p>No, they use whatever is on your transcript.</p>
<p>source: NYU Forums</p>
<p>At my college, an A is 80%.</p>
<p>where did you get that information?</p>
<p>i just searched their website and they say A=4.0 and plus mark adds 0.35 while minus subtracts 0.35
correct me if im wrong</p>
<p>NYU's "A-" is 3.7...</p>
<p>They don't recalculate for transfer applicants
If your school's "A-" is 3.666 and you have 3.666 GPA, then..you have an A- haha</p>