Wiki User
∙ 11y ago2.68
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoIt's not clear that this is a legitimate thing to do because a 4-point GPA at one educational institution might have a different interpretation at other institutions that use the 5-point scale. Across the world there is a large range of ways of awarding academic grades. Please see the link.
2.5 GPA is an 80% because it is on a weighted scale. Anything from 0% to 59% is still a 0 GPA.
"GPA" is already an abbreviation for "grade point average". There is no further abbreviation for the abbreviation.
Yes, it is a Continuous variable measured along an equidistant scale.
Does not sound possible. GPA is usually on a 4.0 scale, some places use a 5.0 scale. I've never heard of any scale beyond that, but there could be.
It's not clear that this is a legitimate thing to do because a 4-point GPA at one educational institution might have a different interpretation at other institutions that use the 5-point scale. Across the world there is a large range of ways of awarding academic grades. Please see the link.
That depends on whether your honors classes were regular high school classes or AP or International Baccalaureate classes, which may have been calculated on a 5.0 GPA scale. A GPA of 4.3 on a 5.0 scale is the equivalent of 3.44 on a 4.0 GPA scale.
A sign that your question lacked some of the information necessary to convert the 5.237 from its original scale to a 4.0 GPA scale. If the 5.237 was achieved on a 5.0 scale, it would be approximately 4.19 on a 4.0 scale. If the original scale was 6.0, the conversion would be 3.49 on a 4.0 scale.
Grade Point Average, a scale based on your performance in school
A 77 GPA grade point average over a 4 scale would be a C. This is about average.
on a 4 point scale, most definitely... on an 11 point scale, its doubtful... and I really hope you are joking with the grammar
12-Point --------------- 4-Point 12 ---------------------- 4.0 11 ---------------------- 3.9 10 ---------------------- 3.7 9 ----------------------- 3.3 8 ----------------------- 3.0 7 ----------------------- 2.7 6 ----------------------- 2.3 5 ----------------------- 2.0 4 ----------------------- 1.7 3 ----------------------- 1.3 2 ----------------------- 1.0 1 ----------------------- 0.7 0 ----------------------- 0.0 A 10.24 GPA would equal to approximately a 3.7 on a 4 point scale! 12-Point --------------- 4-Point 12 ---------------------- 4.0 11 ---------------------- 3.9 10 ---------------------- 3.7 9 ----------------------- 3.3 8 ----------------------- 3.0 7 ----------------------- 2.7 6 ----------------------- 2.3 5 ----------------------- 2.0 4 ----------------------- 1.7 3 ----------------------- 1.3 2 ----------------------- 1.0 1 ----------------------- 0.7 0 ----------------------- 0.0 A 10.24 GPA would equal to approximately a 3.7 on a 4 point scale!
It depends on the scale. Some schools count on a 4 point scale and some count on a 5 point scale. If you take an AP or advanced placement class, you get an extra point. Regardless it is a high grade point.
On a 4 point scale i had a 3.45. On the weighted scale i had a 4.5, I took nothing but pre-ap and AP courses.
Simple ratio... 10 is to 8.3 as 4 is to X (10 over 8.33 is to 4 over X) (8.33*4)/10 = 3.32 3.32
It depends on if the GPA is based on a 5 point scale or a 4 point scale. On a 5 point scale, an A is worth 5 points. On a 4 point scale scale, an A is worth 4 points. So a 3.29 is a B on the 4 point scale and a C on a 5 point scale.
That depends on whether your GPA is higher than 4.0 because you took college or AP classes with a 4.5 or 5.0 value along with your regular high school classes, or whether your high school GPA was calculated on a different scale (4.5 or 5.0) In the first scenario, you input the higher number (for example, 4.16), which simply means you took advanced coursework, got high grades, and maxed out the scale. College admissions offices know how to interpret the higher number. In the second scenario, you need to convert your GPA from whatever scale is used to a 4.0 scale. The calculation is simple: 4.0(Your GPA/Scale Used) = x. If you're not sure what scale was used, ask your high school guidance counselor.