<p>In my school a B- is 85-86, B is 87-90, B+ is 91-92, A- is 93-94, A is 95-98, A+ is 98+, We use a 4.0 scale, My unweighted is 88.11/100 and weighted is 99/100. Whats my Gpa for both out of 4? Any help needed.</p>
<p>Anyone, come on?</p>
<p>In the morning, pick up your telephone and call your high school. Somebody is there slaving away in the administrative offices all summer long and is answering the phone between at least 9am and 12noon. Whoever it is who answers the phone will either be able to tell you just exactly how to convert your grade to a 4.0 scale, or will be able to connect you with a person who can.</p>
<p>Don't panic.</p>
<p>Any of you guys have any ideas?</p>
<p>3.52 and 3.96</p>
<p>88/100 = 88 .88 * 4 = 3.52
99/100 = .99 .99 * 4 = 3.96</p>
<p>that means a 76/100 is a 3.0 gpa, is that right Nightmare...</p>
<p>I know a kid with an 81 and it translated to about a 2.8. I think a 3.0 is generally considered a B not a B-.</p>
<p>At my daughter's school, an A (97-100) is considered a 4.3 not a 4.0. A 4.0 would be 93-96, a 3.7 is 90-92.</p>
<p>can some give me a clear ?/4.0 GPA grade?</p>
<p>Do you have your letter grades? Is a 4.0 an A, a 3.0 a B... or is there some other notation for +'s and -'s?</p>
<p>Yeah we have +'s and -'s, its at the top of the page.</p>
<p>I know, but is how do the letter grades convert on the 4.0 scale? Does an A- equal a 4.0 or a 3. something? Because, a percentage isn't linearly proportional to the 4.0 scale...</p>
<p>I believe a 4.0 is a A and 3.0 is a B</p>
<p>3.0 is more like an 83.</p>
<p>Your grading scale is probably exactly like the Canadian (or US) Eights System. See: Eights</a> System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.</p>
<p>I did a short 2 minute google search, and I can't come up exactly with a "real conversion chart," but it may be worth it for you to search around old threads to see how Canadians converted their percentages into GPA (sorry to use Canadians as example so much, but this question came up a lot before and there might be some useful stuff in the archives).</p>
<p>Worse case scenario (the simplest) - they'll just use your unweighted (which is a B at your school) and give you a 3.0 or 4.0 (weighted).</p>
<p>And your school most probably had dealt with these problems before, so it would be best for you to ask them directly.</p>
<p>And this is the "standard" US GPA system (before anyone bashes me for this, let me just say that a lot of schools revised it - if you Wikipedia you'll see a lot of pages about grading standards in America).</p>
<p>This is also known as the "Tens System" (there also a Nines System)</p>
<p>97+ for A+/93+ for A - 4.0 (or 4.3 and 4.0, depending on where you go - there's quite a lot 4.3 for A+ schools)
90 to 92 = A− = 3.7
87 to 89 = B+ = 3.3
83 to 86 = B = 3.0
80 to 82 = B− = 2.7
77 to 79 = C+ =2.3
73 to 76 = C = 2.0
70 to 72 = C− = 1.7
67 to 69 = D+ = 1.3
63 to 66 = D = 1.0
60 to 62 = D− = 0.7 or 0.0
Below 60 = F = 0</p>
<p>I'm a Canadian and as I always say, you better just give your percentage grades to colleges if that's how your school grades. However, the OP's school seems to give letter grades too... If they take his UW average percentage grade, it might not be the same as a 4.0-scale GPA. For example, a student have a GPA of 3.8 but when you take his grades, he has a 97% average...</p>
<p>Up, need to know</p>
<p>At recent college fairs the reps made clear that they become familiar with the individual school's offerings and grading and view the applicant's GPA in that context. Since colleges approach transcripts differently, there's not much use in worrying about the "correct" GPA. </p>
<p>Furthermore, many high schools keep "scattergrams" of their experience in college placement, which show admissions records by college for each year. That information is far more useful to you than figuring out the "correct" GPA.</p>