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Currently I have a 2.492 and I need a 2.75 or higher by the end of Spring qrt.. I have winter quarter grades to count in and it would be around 3.0 or 3.2 GPA. with 14 credit hrs.. Then I would have Spring .... how would I accumulate winter qrt into my current accumulative GPA and figure out what GPA I need to get higher than a 2.7.. is that possible?

2006-11-27 16:12:57 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

I guess Im kind of confused, within all of the response that Ive received I guess what I was trying to ask is if i get a 3.0 this autumn qrt with 14 credit hrs how would that change my accum. gpa which currently sucks at 2.492... ??? then add that accum.. with my possible winter qrt grades maybe would be 3.2 with 16 credit hrs... the total gpa for winter and spring.. would that be at or more than 2.75???



currently i have 88 units added with 14 credit hrs this qrt and 16 credit winter total would be 118 accumulative credit hours.if i get 3.0 this qrt and next qrt at a 3.0 or 3.2? will I achieve at 2.75 accum.. or higher..?? thanks a bunch for ur responses..

2006-11-27 16:43:40 · update #1

5 answers

How many units does the 2.492 consist of? What you would need to do is take the total number of units you have already

You need to do a weighted average. So, say for example the 2.492 is 100 units, this semester you get a 3.0 with 14 units and the same for Spring. That would be a total of 128. The first 2.492 would consist of 78.12% (which is 100 units (my estimate) divided by the total of 128 (which you would have based on my estimate and 14 units in the spring and the fall), this semester would be 10.9% at 3.0 and 10.9% at 3.0 for Spring. Then multiply like this:

(78.125% * 2.492) + (10.9375% * 3.0) + (10.9375% * 3.0) = 2.60

If you already have 80 units - it would look like this:

(74.074% * 2.492) + (12.963% * 3.0) + (12.963% * 3.0) = 2.623

and if it turns out that you get a 3.2 this quarter and Spring quarter:

(74.074% * 2.492) + (12.963% * 3.2) + (12.963% * 3.2) = 2.67

Hope this helps. I will check later to see if you added more information.

OKAY - with the additional information - here is where you are:

Currently 88 units at 2.492 - if you get a 3.0 with 14 units this qtr. and 3.2 with 16 units in Spring you will have a 3.648. If Spring is a 3.0 you will have a 2.62.

If you got a 3.5 this qtr and next - you would end up with a 3.748. If you got a 3.0 this qtr and a 4.0 in Spring - you would end up with a 2.7567. It is possible - but would take a lot of work...

Good Luck and I hope that clears it up.

2006-11-27 16:31:19 · answer #1 · answered by Smiles :) 2 · 1 0

A = 4; B = 3; C = 2; D = 1; F = 0

Take each letter grade and put the numerical number for it. then add up all the numbers and divide by the number of grades. that give you the GPA on a 4.0 scale.

Example:
4 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 3 = 16 divided by 5 = 3.2 gpa

2006-11-27 16:26:08 · answer #2 · answered by pinelake302 6 · 0 0

The simplest way to calculate your GPA with the information you provided is just add the 2.492 and 3.0 and divide by 2, this would give you a 2.746 GPA.

2006-11-27 16:25:32 · answer #3 · answered by John K 5 · 0 0

well A= 4 B=3 C=2

(2.5 +x) /2= final gpa a sorry I was going by two semesters if it's 5 quarters it might be different.

the way I was figuring if you put 2.75= 1.25 + x
2.75-1.25 = X
1.5 =x
so you will have to get a 3 point grade average
3.0 or slightly aove.

2006-11-27 16:23:44 · answer #4 · answered by Grev 4 · 0 0

the second answer given is only true if your cumulative gpa is based on the exact same # of units last quarter as you are taking this quarter (14 units) AND that the last quarter was your first quarter in college.

2006-11-27 16:26:34 · answer #5 · answered by ftz 6 · 0 0

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