GPA is weighted by the grade you earn respective to its credit hour amount. This is as not all classes are the typical 3-credit, but some (usually labs) are 1 or 2 credits, and some difficult lecture courses are 4 credits.
Also ,what can affect GPA is that some schools use the +/- system for grading. This means you can actually get an A- as your official grade and that carries a weight of 3.7, not 4.0 as in a 'regular' A. Correspondingly, a B+ would have a weight of 3.3. This can either lead to lower or higher GPAs for a student. For instance, the days of 'squeezing by' for an A is over with institutions that use the +/- system. And no, an A+ does not give you anything over a 4.0.
2007-11-03 23:35:08
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answer #1
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answered by iSpeakTheTruth 7
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Get out of there as quick as obtainable! end in 3 years with a 2.a million GPA if obtainable. Then study up on pastime interviewing and, once you get into the workplace with the manager who can employ you, say "i understand my GPA is low yet I made the alternative to end my preparation on time so i might want to enter the paintings force. i imagine educating is significant yet I keep in mind that adventure is, too." many times, a middling 2.8 GPA would not do you a lot worse than a three.9 in pastime applications. what's more advantageous significant is the way you cutting-edge your self and your credentials in an interview, the way you community on your occupation, and what certain in-call for skills you could show. Now, convinced, the GPA is significant for most grad. courses, and a very extreme GPA from a precise college like Harvard or MIT would have some panache--yet mostly taking 8 years to the BA is in easy words going to make you older quick and construct up adequate student personal loan debt to kill your existence lifeless.
2016-10-23 09:03:16
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I never heard of an US college going over 4.0 but I do hear that some colleges (like Harvard and the ivys) like to inflat gpas so to keep their average gpa really high but its still on the 4.0 system and no higher. I could be wrong though about the inflation (don't want to offend anyone).
2007-11-03 21:56:27
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answer #3
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answered by m0nk3y15 3
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Classes are not weighted based on their difficulty--there is typically a set highest GPA. But the more credits a class is, the more weight it carries. For example, if you're taking 3-credit classes, and 1 4-credit lab science class (four credits because it meets a bit longer than the others), then that 4-credit class would hold a little more weight in your GPA than the 3-credit classes.
Most colleges use a typical 4.0 scale. MIT, for one, uses a 5.0 scale.
2007-11-03 21:20:38
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answer #4
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answered by kimpenn09 6
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I've never heard of a college in the U.S. at which it was possible to get more than a 4.0 GPA. They don't normally weight GPAs like they do in high school.
2007-11-03 20:21:17
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answer #5
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answered by neniaf 7
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Most of the Institutes and colleges around the world evaluates their students on a scale of 10. The CGPA or GPA is calculated on a scale of 10 and the maximum you can score on a scale of 10 is 10.
2007-11-03 20:24:22
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answer #6
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answered by AB2874 3
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USA GPA = 4.0
2007-11-03 20:31:19
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answer #7
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answered by equal_opposites 5
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I graduated with a 10.0 GPA.
2007-11-03 20:19:56
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answer #8
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answered by usaisthebestest 3
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