<p>I know in some schools the scale for an A is 90-100. At my school it is 92-100. Is this normal? I remember in freshman year I ended up getting a B+ because my average was a 91.</p>
<p>93-100 A
85-92 B</p>
<p>I’ve never had anything lower than a 92 so I don’t know after that.</p>
<p>92.5-100 A
90-92.4 A-
86.5-89.4 B+</p>
<p>so on so on</p>
<p>86-89 b+
90-94 a-
95-100 a</p>
<p>92.5-96.5 = a</p>
<p>It depends on the test/subject, but somewhere around:
A* 90-100
A 80-90</p>
<p>Although its normally done on national percentages for tests, (ie top 5% get A<em>s or something) for some tests, A</em> can be as low as 80%</p>
<p>90 - 100: A
80 - 89: B
70 - 79: C</p>
<p>and so on.</p>
<p>My school district doesn’t employ a +/- system which would be nice when I get a 98-99 in a class. But, oh well.</p>
<p>90-100 is an A for “regular” classes
85-100 is an A for AP classes (my school doesn’t weight so they do this instead)</p>
<p>92-100 was an A in my high school. No pluses or minuses.</p>
<p>90-100 is an A
80-90 B, etc. </p>
<p>They do put the +/- onthe transcript but an A- is still a 4.0, a B+ is still a 3.0, etc.</p>
<p>A+ 97-100
A 93-96
A 90-92</p>
<p>etc. except after C- (70-72), it drops straight to an F.</p>
<p>97.5-100 a+
93.5-97.5 a
89.5-93.5 a-</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>how is this even possible? I can’t think of any AP class that gives out higher than a 94-95, and not even in Honors or Regulars does this happen. Only like, in regular world language does it happens, but not regular core classes.</p>
<p>I usually pull off 98-99 in math, Honors French and history classes. Not exactly difficult if you study.</p>
<p>an A is 92.5 - 96.5</p>
<p>u r either a super genius sent fron the heavens or ur school is easy</p>
<p>A = 89.49 - 100 at my school!</p>
<p>89.5 and above.</p>
<p>95-96 is an a-
97-98 is an a
99-100 is an a+</p>
<p>it’s a pretty small window.</p>
<p>89.5-100.
Getting an 89.5 is the same weight as getting a 100.</p>