<p>I totally dominate all my science classes and always have over a 100% in them. I’m just curious if colleges notice this or if they treat it the same as a 93%.</p>
<p>Does your school provide the actual grade on transcripts, or does it just say A, B, C, D, F? They see it if your school sends it, though I don’t know if it would make a difference. I know my school just sends the letters.</p>
<p>It depends on your school’s GPA system. If your school reports percentages to colleges, then they’ll probably see some difference between the two; however, since many schools just report the letter grade and not the percentage, they’re not going to give you more consideration because you have 102% and someone else has an A.</p>
<p>Also, 102%? Is there a lot of extra credit or something?</p>
<p>^My teacher curves the tests because all the kids are dumb so i get like 110% on all the tests.</p>
<p>^Exactly the same thing that happens in my APUSH class. 103% average in that so far, and I currently have a 107% in Bio. I was a bit sad to find out that my transcript would only show a final letter grade and I wouldn’t get anything special for getting over a 100% in my first AP class.</p>
<p>Nope. 92.5% is the most efficient grade you can get.</p>
<p>So is a 93% a 4.0?</p>
<p>Yeah.
89.6+ = 4.0
79.6+ = 3.0</p>
<p>^Not if there’s A-/B+. For us it’s 92.5+ is an A, 89.5 is A-, 87.5 is B+, 82.5 is B, 79.5 is B-.</p>
<p>Huh, my school puts the percentage grade on the transcript instead of letters, but there’s no weight put on for a high A compared to a low A. Best of both worlds, I guess.</p>