<p>Does anyone know?</p>
<p>On a similar note, when colleges recalculate your GPA, do they include your freshmen year? Also, do they differentiate between a B-/B/B+?</p>
<p>i kno princeton and michigan do not count your freshman year</p>
<p>Stanford as well.</p>
<p>Colleges do not differentiate between letter grade suffixes. A grade is a letter grade. </p>
<p>Also, colleges that do not consider freshman year, will INCLUDE your freshman year grades into the overall GPA, but the grades themselves will not be visible. I think this is how it works, it depends on the university.</p>
<p>"Colleges do not differentiate between letter grade suffixes. A grade is a letter grade.</p>
<p>Also, colleges that do not consider freshman year, will INCLUDE your freshman year grades into the overall GPA, but the grades themselves will not be visible. I think this is how it works, it depends on the university."</p>
<p>The letter grade suffixes thing is not universally true. Many colleges (like the University of Michigan) do not include + and - , but many colleges record whatever grades are reported, including (or excluding) + and -.</p>
<p>If they don't include freshman year, they don't include it. It's not on the modified transcript, it's not in your GPA. In your GPA at Michigan, only your unweighted grades from academic classes in grades 10 and 11 are included.</p>
<p>In CA, your UC GPA includes what I posted. So it depends on the school.</p>
<p>the UC gpa for admission purposes is only Soph & Jr year academic ("a-g") classes, weighted for US-approved honors/ap/ib courses, and capped at 8 semesters worth of bonus points; for elc purposes, there is no cap. The UC gpa for admission purposes does NOT include Frosh grades.</p>