Not enough information to be sure the scale I'm using matches your school, but here goes.
In general, an A is a 4, a B is a 3, a C is a 2 and so on.
Therefore, 2As and 2Bs would be 4+4+3+3 which equals 14.
You must then divided the 14 by the number of grades which is 4.
14/4 is a GPA of 3.5
Please be aware that some classes you take may be weighted. In that case, the GPA would be higher.
If all 7 of those courses have equal weights, then on a four-point system, that is a GPA of 2.857 .
3.0
No.Neither are commutative: a - b does not equal b - a, and a/b does not equal b/a.Neither is associative: (a - b) - c does not equal a - (b - c), and (a/b)/c does not equal a/(b/c).Examples of these are:4 - 2 does not equal 2 - 4.1/3 does not equal 3/1.(6 - 5) - 1 does not equal 6 - (5 - 1).(10/2)/2 does not equal 10/(2/2).
1396
If all your classes are standard (4.0 quality points for an A), then your GPA is as follows:2 A's = 4 x 2 = 8 points3 B's = 3 x 3 = 9 points8 + 9 = 17 points17 / 5 credits attempted3.4 GPA
B/b+/a
IT IS EQUAL TO AN A- so 1 B
A 2.81 GPA is a B Average.
Typically it is a letter grade of B.
It equals to a B.
A 3.6 GPA typically falls within the range of a B+ grade. Grades can vary depending on the grading scale used by the institution, so it's recommended to refer to the specific grading scale of the school to determine the corresponding letter grade.
On a scale for GPA where A =4,B=3,C=2, and D=1 then GPA = (4 x2) + (3 x 3) + (2x2) all divided by 7 to get average GPA = 3.0
A 3.48 GPA is equal to about a B, maybe a little bit lower.
Depending on the grading system of the college or university, it could be either a C+ or an B-. Definitely a B-. Typically a B- is a 2.7, so a 2.8 is above that.
If all 7 of those courses have equal weights, then on a four-point system, that is a GPA of 2.857 .
Your cumulative GPA is 2.7.
First we assume that all of them were worth the same number of credits. If that is the case then it will be at least 2.25 it could by higher.