Not at all, its looked it at, but also Extra curricular activities, volunteer hours. What classes you've taken, SAT/ACT scores.
It depends on your GPA to begin with. In general it will drop them, unless you have failed everything else.
You can probably transfer between colleges with a 2.6 GPA. This is a B/C average, which means you are probably passing everything.
It is possible. Their average unweighted GPA is a 3.0 and with the extra curricular activities helping you it is plausible. Remember GPA isn't everything.
You sir, are an idiot. A GPA does not rise higher than a 4.5, and even then that's 150% on EVERYTHING your entire school life, which is impossible.
go onto www.collegeboard.com, it'll tell you everything that you need to know
I just got accepted into Purdue and Indiana University Bloomington and I have an unweighted GPA of 3.54 and rising. However, GPA is not everything a college looks at; if you play sports or are involved in clubs and wrote a well written essay you could still be accepted with a lower GPA.
No. A 79 average is 2.4 GPA. Heres a list of all the Grade point averages. 0%-59% => 0 GPA 60% => 0.7 GPA 61% => 0.8 GPA 62% => 0.8 GPA 63% => 0.9 GPA 64% => 1.0 GPA 65% => 1.0 GPA 66% => 1.1 GPA 67% => 1.2 GPA 68% => 1.3 GPA 69% => 1.4 GPA 70% => 1.5 GPA 71% => 1.6 GPA 72% => 1.7 GPA 73% => 1.8 GPA 74% => 1.9 GPA 75% => 2.0 GPA 76% => 2.1 GPA 77% => 2.2 GPA 78% => 2.3 GPA 79% => 2.4 GPA 80% => 2.5 GPA 81% => 2.7 GPA 82% => 2.8 GPA 83% => 2.9 GPA 84% => 3.0 GPA 85% => 3.0 GPA 86% => 3.1 GPA 87% => 3.2 GPA 88% => 3.3 GPA 89% => 3.4 GPA 90% => 3.5 GPA 91% => 3.5 GPA 92% => 3.6 GPA 93% => 3.7 GPA 94% => 3.8 GPA 95% => 3.9 GPA 96% => 3.9 GPA 97% => 4.0 GPA 98% => 4.0 GPA 99% => 4.0 GPA 100% => 4.0 GPA http://qna.educouncil.org/Tests_and_Results/nZxyNXyyynN.html
A 3.17 gpa
No. A 3.0 GPA is a B average. So it is a good GPA
this is the GPA you need to get a 2.0 GPA
I have a 9th grade daughter and gpa is 82.57142 what is that
A GPA of 1.73 is considered low for the tenth grade. It's important to focus on improving your grades and seeking support from teachers or tutors. Remember that grades are not everything and there are various pathways to success.