A grade A at AS level (if you did not carry on the subject until the end of A2 A Level) is worth 60 points. A grade A from a full A Level is worth 120 points. For the full UCAS tarfiff table, please see the related link.
GCE A Levels - Equivalent UCAS Points
A - 120 Points
B - 100 Points
C - 80 Points
D - 60 Points
E - 40 Points
Anything less that an E is a Fail grade
UCAS Points refelct a final grade. In the UK, if you take an AS and then carry it on to A Level, you carry the points over, and at the end of the second year the two grades are combined to form one A Level. If you decide to not carry a subject on at A Level, you "cash in" the points, and simply receive an AS Level, equivilent to half an A Level. So if you recived a B at AS Level, but carried the subject on to A Level, you would not receive the AS Level, but would receive the A Level at the end of your second year, as a combination of the two years marks. You can then convert the correct number of UCAS points for each full A Level, or AS Level eg A at A Level = 120 Points A at AS = 60 points (An AS is worth 50% of an A Level - easy!)
UCAS helps students to find the right under-graduate course in UK, also offers combination of more subjects, depending on the qualification of each individual. UCAS provides the students with statistics for the most popular course which can help students make the best choice.
It's not that simple. You have to know how many credits in each course and the quality points to each grade. You add the total number of quality points assigned to each grade and divide it by the number of credits completed.
If it has 9 problems, each problem will probably be worth around 11 points each.
Each grade is assigned quality points. For example A = 12pts, B = 9pts, C = 6pts. The points are used to calculate the students grade point average (GPA). You take total number of quality points and divide that number by the number of credits taken, and that would give you the GPA. Thus, an A and a B would total 21 quality points, divided by 6 credits (if the two courses were 3 credits each) would equal a GPA of 3.5 (letter grade of B+).
Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."Typically, a GPA of 3.0 is a letter grade of "B."
well each question is worth 3.3333333 points so multiply how many you got right by 3.333333 and that's your grade
If you get one wrong out of 15 questions, your grade would depend on how the grading scale is set up. If each question is worth the same amount of points, you would have a score of 14/15, which usually translates to a high grade such as an A or A+. However, if the grading scale deducts a fixed amount of points for each incorrect answer, it would depend on the specific grading scale to determine the grade.
It depends how many points each question is worth. If each question is worth five points on a twenty question test, you would get ninety-five percent.
If there are 20 questions then each question is worth 5 points because 100 total points divided by 20 equals 5.If you missed 8 questions then 8 times 5 points equals 40 points wrong, so you have to subtract that from 100 to get a grade of 60. Study harder next time.
On a college or university level, it's not that simple. I would have to know not only the grade, but how many credits each course was. The grade point average is calculate by adding the total number of quality points (each grade is assigned a specific number of quality points), and dividing that number by the total number of credits taken. Thus, if each course was three credits, we would have a GPA base on that number. However, if some courses were three credits and some were four credits, then the GPA would be different.
A girl at my school got over 2500 no joke!