What is the average undergraduate GPA of students attending U of M?

<p>I want to know what the average GPA of students already attending UofM is.</p>

<p>that really depends on what they are in… Engineering, LSA, Ross, etc.</p>

<p>3.2 10 char</p>

<p>Can someone cite me a website or document por favor?</p>

<p>does anyone know avg GPA for college of Engineering (undergraduate) ??</p>

<p>^ 2.8 to 2.9 (10 char)</p>

<p>2.8 to 2.9 for College of Engineering…wow…seriously ?? I was guessing around 3.3 or so for College of Engineering (Undergraduate).</p>

<p>the early classes in engineering are meant to weed out the bottom kids so some classes can be tough, or at least the grading.</p>

<p>Avg. premed GPA? :P</p>

<p>2.8 for engineering I think</p>

<p>Average premed GPA would be very difficult to determine, because I do not believe premeds register anywhere. I would imagine by senior year, those who end up actually going to med school likely have an average GPA of a 3.6 or higher. This would also depend on their major exactly.</p>

<p>The average grade in a lot of premed classes is a B- which is a 2.7.</p>

<p>2.9 is the quoted average GPA in engineering, but I believe if you actually found the average, it would be a little higher. </p>

<p>My guess at average GPAs:</p>

<p>3.0 CoE
3.3 LSA
3.7 Ross (As I’m guessing they mostly ace their non-B school classes)</p>

<p>These GPAs however are not all equivalent though. For instance, the average ACT score for Ross students is a 33, where as it’s a 31 for CoE and a 28 or 29 for LSA.</p>

<p>^Undergraduate GPA in Winter 2010 was 3.202. I can’t seem to find the Ross and CoE source I was thinking of, but I recall they’re ~3.6 and ~2.8, respectively.</p>

<p>“^Undergraduate GPA in Winter 2010 was 3.202.”</p>

<p>This is college as a whole? Where did you find this?</p>

<p>As for average Engineering GPA being a 2.8… I just don’t see it. None of my classes are curved below a B- (I believe 3 of them are curved to a B- and the other a B or B+?) and a B- is a 2.7. I’m told as well that when you take 400 & 500-level classes the curve gets higher, and a lot of the LSA classes are curved higher too.</p>

<p>Generally from what I hear from people, in Engineering a 3.5 is the level for a “good” GPA and a 3.0 is the level for an “acceptable” GPA.</p>

<p>Vladenschlutte, a a 3.5 gpa is the engineering cutoff for magna cum laude, which signifies top 10%. 3.2 is the cutoff for cum laude, which is top 25%. A 3.75 gpa is the cutoff for summa cum laude, which is the top 3%. This is straight from the COE registrar office on graduation honors.</p>

<p>I dont know what classes you have been in because all the entry level math/physics prereq are curved between B and B- towards the B- side. Most 200 level classes are curved to B-. There are some exceptions where ******bag profs even curve to the lowest end of B- because they are “supposed to curve to a B-”</p>

<p>By LSA classes I wasn’t referring to Math and Physics, but HU/SS classes, and anything else any Engineering major might take. </p>

<p>As for the honor’s levels, they do not change them from year to year, right? I think they underestimate the number who get those GPAs. They definitely do not actually peg those numbers to actual GPA percentiles if they’re not changing them. At the very least, it doesn’t seem right that the average engineering GPA would be a 2.8 if none of the classes are curved below a 2.7, and 400-level classes are mostly curved higher.</p>

<p>I would guess that the average in LSA is a 3.2.</p>

<p>These are honors cutoffs for LSA: [College</a> of Literature, Science, and the Arts : Students](<a href=“http://www.lsa.umich.edu/umich/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=a9a3afbe082ba110VgnVCM100000a3b1d38dRCRD]College”>http://www.lsa.umich.edu/umich/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=a9a3afbe082ba110VgnVCM100000a3b1d38dRCRD)</p>

<p>What are the distinctions in that link?^ Like, what % of students?</p>

<p>well a lot of students in Engr have to survive the weed out classes. Maybe those kill ur GPA</p>