You add the 4 numbers altogether and then divide the sum by 4.
Example:
1. there are four numbers: 10, 20, 12, 10
2. Add the numbers: 10+20+12+10= 52
3. Divide the sum by the total amount of numbers which is 4: 52/4
Answer/Average: 13
you add up all the grade totals and divide that number by the number of grades. A=4 B=3 C=2 D=1 F=0 For example if your child received 3 A's and 4 B's you will calculate it like this: 4+4+4+3+3+3+3= 24 then you divide 24 by 7(number of grades) the average is a 3.4 which is the grade point average. =)
you add up all the grade totals and divide that number by the number of grades. A=4 B=3 C=2 D=1 F=0 For example if your child received 3 A's and 4 B's you will calculate it like this: 4+4+4+3+3+3+3= 24 then you divide 24 by 7(number of grades) the average is a 3.4 which is the grade point average. =)
It is around 77-79 percent. The grade would be B+ It's an 85 percent, B+
certain multipying factor is associated wid every grade u score....multiplying factor of different grades is given. A grade =10 B grade =8 C grade =6 D grade =4 E grade =2 now suppose u have six different courses n your grades are say A,B,C,D,D,E den your GPA(grade performance average) is given by 10+8+6+4+4+2/6 = 5.67
NGA is Numeric Grade Average (i.e. the 0-100 scale) where as GPA is the Grade Point Average where your numeric grades are assigned a point value (The 0-4 scale) Example: Your grades in your classes are: Science: 93 = 4.0 Math: 91 = 4.0 English: 88 = 3.0 History: 90 = 4.0 Foreign Language: 91 = 4.0 Music: 95 = 4.0 Your NGA is the average of these grades, 91.3. Your GPA would be the average of your points assigned to each grade, 3.83
Yes, it is for grades 4 to 6.
4-8 (Grade 9 can do it, but not win)
The grading is the same as in the 4.0 grade system; however the points per grade is different. An "A" in the 4.0 system is 4 points. An "A" in the 5.0 system is 5 points. So, it's possible to graduate with a greater than a 4.0 Grade Point Average.
A GPA or also known as grade point average is calculated per quarter. At the end of each school you the 4 quarters or 2 semesters are calculated to together for a GPA of the year.
level 8 A* level 7 A/A* level 6 B level 5 C level 4 D level 3 E/F level 2 G/U This varies from subject to subject. These are the grades you should get if you reach the written level at the end of KS3.
The grades A,B,C,D,F are given the numbers 4,3,2,1,0. Thus if you have 4 As in one semester your Grade Point Average (GPA) for that semester would be 4. If you had 2 As and 2 Cs your GPA would be 3. You add up the numerical score of your grades and divide by the number of courses. As a complication, some classes give more "credit" than others, so that you have to give more or less weight to the grade in the course, depending on how many credits the course counts for. For example, a 2-credit course counts for only half as much as a 4-credit course.
in grade 4 you have to learn the b flat major scale and also in higher grades.(p.s. im a preparing for my grade 4 piano)