<p>95-96 is an a-! That sucks!</p>
<p>A: 93-100
A-: 90-92
B+: 87-89
B: 83-86</p>
<p>etc.</p>
<p>A- 90.0-92.9
A-93-98
A±99-100</p>
<p>Pretty simple :p</p>
<p>A: 96-100
a-: 90-95</p>
<p>Tough luck.
90-100</p>
<p>Do you mean like a full A 90-100
or a A (without A-)93-100(90-93)</p>
<p>An A at my school is the normal 90-100, but not sure about the +/- thing.
It most likely goes like this:
90-93 is A-
94-97 is A
98-100 is A+</p>
<p>My school does not use the +/- system either. Grades of .5 or higher round up.
93-100 A
92-85 B
84-76 C and so on.
A’s get 4 points, B’s get 3, Ap A gets 5, Honors is treated the same as general in regard to weighting.</p>
<p>Your soul and your social life.</p>
<p>My school follows a British curriculum so an A is 80-89%.</p>
<p>93-100 A
90-92 A-
87-89 B+
83-86 B
80-82 B-</p>
<p>You get the idea…</p>
<p>89.5%-100%</p>
<p>An A is 90-100. On the transcript grades are noted as letter grades, meaning no 94 or 98 just an A.</p>
<p>99-100 a+
94-97 a
92-93 a-</p>
<p>100-95 = a
94-90= b
89-85= c
84-70= d
69 and below= f</p>
<p>a 100.5 average is considered a D lol</p>
<p>94 +</p>
<p>90%-100%
It’s the same with every grade, it also dosn’t matter what type of class. It doesn’t matter if it’s - or +, so an A is just an A on the transcript. It dosn’t matter except for class rank.</p>
<p>99 and 100: A+
96 ~ 98: A
94 and 95: A-</p>
<ol>
<li>But I never get that good grades anyways.</li>
</ol>