How does your school weigh classes?

<p>uh, no, not at all. What ThisCouldBeHeavn wants is “proper interval notation for clarity.”
I’ll show you…</p>

<p>[89.5,100]=A
[79.5,89.5)=B
[69.5,79.5)=C
[59.5,69.5)=D
[0,59.5)=F
(changed for mulberrypie)</p>

<p>I don’t have the “greater than or equal to” symbol on my computer, but hopefully everyone understands that notation.</p>

<p>Ah, I see. Shame on me for not knowing. But I think that you’re missing a little something. :wink: Haha.</p>

<p>[90,100]=A
[80,89]=B
[70,79]=C
[60,69]=D
[0,59]=F</p>

<p>damn those commas, but you’re still missing the difference between [ and (</p>

<p>Awh man. :frowning:
Please enlighten me, I genuinely don’t understand XD</p>

<p>[ETA] Actually hold on, let me try…</p>

<p>[90,100]=A
[80,90)=B
[70,80)=C
[60,70)=D
[0,60)=F</p>

<p>Yeah, am I good?</p>

<p>My school’s normal grading policy</p>

<p>A: [90, oo)
B: [80, 90)
C: [70, 80)
D: [60, 70)
F: (-oo, 60)</p>

<p>Obviously individual teachers may vary.</p>

<p>haha -oo
Is it possible to get a negative percentage?</p>

<p>Sometimes. I once had a teacher threaten to take off 40 points for every time we talked during a Final Exam. The funny thing was that I didn’t even need to take the Final Exam to get an A, so the only way I wasn’t going to get an A was if I got in trouble for talking multiple times.</p>

<p>In theory, if someone talked enough they could have gone below 0.</p>