<p>the gpa is always put out of 4.0 but in my high school we have it out of 100 and mine is about 96.8. Around what would this be in the 4-point scale??</p>
<p>its 3.872 …</p>
<p>how do u know that???</p>
<p>96.8/25 = 3.872</p>
<p>Or</p>
<p>96.8/100 * 4 = 3.872</p>
<p>o thanks so u just divide by 25… i thought there was a more complex formula</p>
<p>no that doesnt work cuz a 70 is not a 2.2</p>
<p>??</p>
<p>I don’t understand that - on a 4.0 scale, assuming a 96.8 is an A, then you would have a 4.0.</p>
<p>93-100 = A = 4.0
90-92 = A- = 3.67
88-90 = B+ = 3.33
83-87 = B = 3.0</p>
<p>etc.</p>
<p>i mean 2.8</p>
<p>Right, a 70 would be a 1.67 (C-).</p>
<p>PrimitiveFuture - your formula doesn’t make sense - a 93 should be a 4.0 but if you followed the divide by 25 rule, a 93 would be 3.72.</p>
<p>its probably calculated differently at my school (or the entire of Fl.)</p>
<p>then you have a major disadvantage!!</p>
<p>lol.</p>
<p>at my school (and as far as i know pretty much everywhere except CA) a 93 is just as much a 4.0 as a 100 is.</p>
<p>ok… but lets say my gpa conists of a class in which i got a 90, a class in which i got a 95, and a class it which i got a 93… would u first have to convert the scores to out of 4 (3.67,4,4) and then take the average of those? or do u take the average of all of them and find the '4" score for that</p>
<p>Each class gets a grade point (out of 4.0) and then you take the average of it. (Hence the name grade point average lol.)</p>
<p>So, a 90, 93, and 95 - that’s 3.67, 4, and 4. Add them together, you get 11.67. Divide that by the number of classes (3) and you get a GPA of 3.89. Now, if those classes are honors/AP you throw a boost into the equation. At my school, honors/AP get a boost of .33. So, if 2 out of the three were honors, you’d take:</p>
<p>3.67 + 4 + 4 + .33 + .33 = 12.33 / 3 = GPA of 4.11.</p>
<p>Our school do GPAs like this:</p>
<p>(percentage/100%)*4=GPA in 4.0</p>
<p>It isn’t fair…you have to have a 100 to have 4.0, but I’m over it! </p>
<p>We use mostly the 100% scale though!</p>
<p>Here is the most basic one:</p>
<p>A=4
B=3
C=2
D=1
F=0</p>