<p>2 parents - 3.98</p>
<p>2, though they’re divorced - 3.99</p>
<p>2 parents - 4.0</p>
<p>4 Parents, I live at both my moms and dads house. My unweighted GPA is 3.7</p>
<p>2, 3.96 (I think, my school doesn’t usually use the 4.0 grading system)</p>
<p>2, 3.78. 10char</p>
<p>Single mother home
UW - 3.97</p>
<p>
This. So one.</p>
<p>4.0 GPA (but freshman year, take that into account, I’m getting epic owned now as a sophomore)</p>
<p>1 Parent
3.5 unweighted GPA from freshman and sophomore years combined.</p>
<p>Doesn’t the first few chapters of your AP Psych book contain something called “Volunteer bias?”, Importance of “Random Sampling”, and “double blind experiment”? Just Kidding… </p>
<p>I have two parents… 3.95 UW</p>
<p>Huh…isn’t this kind of a biased sample?</p>
<p>Well, here’s my data anyway:</p>
<p>I live with two parents; 4.00 GPA UW.</p>
<p>I live with two parents, and my unweighted GPA is 3.9ish.</p>
<p>2 – 3.7</p>
<p>10chars</p>
<p>1 parent
UW GPA: 3.94</p>
<p>(wow, I forgot how many people still have both parents, at my school, I’m mostly friends with other people who live with only one parent.)</p>
<p>This data is beyond skewed.</p>
<p>^ Hmm, I wonder why? Of course it’s going to be skewed.</p>
<p>1 ~ 4.0
Can you say “biased sample”?</p>
<p>need to stratify your sampling hun.</p>
<p>2, 3.8</p>
<p>2 parents and my GPA is 4.0</p>