<p>Quick problems I'm trying to figure out. I've got 4 A's and 4 A-'s for my final grade, freshman year. What would that be on a 4.0 scale?</p>
<p>I don’t think it’s the same at every school. For example, only a 96 and above is considered a 4.0 at my school but I’ve noticed some people only need like a 90 or above to get a 4.0…something like that.</p>
<p>at my school we only do A = 4 and b = 3 etc. so idk.</p>
<p>That’s a 4.0 GPA</p>
<p>It varies between schools. At most schools though, all A’s (whether A, A+, or A-) are worth 4 points, so it’d be a 4.0.</p>
<p>It looks like a 4.0 any way you slice it.</p>
<p>Find your high school’s profile, or ask a guidance counselor (or maybe even look in your HS handbook - this information is on a chart in ours).</p>
<p>If you use the old fashion standard (from before schools started weighting honors and AP classes), your A’s would be worth 4.0 and your A-'s would be 3.7, so you would have a 3.85</p>
<p>If you attend our local HS, your A would be worth 3.8, 4.2 or 4.6 depending on the level of the class (unless they are remedial level in which case they might be worth only 3.4 or even 3.0) An A- would be worth 3.6, 4.0 or 4.8, so it really depends on your school’s particular grading system.</p>
<p>4.0= A (93.5% and above)
3.67= A- (90%-93.49%)
At least at my high school this is how it works.</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure A/A+ is 4.0, and an A- is a 3.7, so</p>
<p>(4 x 4.0) + (4 x 3.7) = 30.8</p>
<p>30.8 / 8 (classes) = 3.85?</p>
<p>Right?</p>
<p>Your GPA at my High School would be 3.84. (See above post)</p>
<p>My school
A+ 100-98= 4.0
A 97-95= 4.0
A-= 93-94= 4.0
Depends on your schools grading scale</p>
<p>At my school your GPA would most likely be a 4.0. I don’t know your number grades.</p>
<p>What would Colleges like Harvard see?</p>
<p>It depends on how your school does it</p>