Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
A 2.94 GPA means that a student is just below a B average. A 4.0 is an A, 3.0 is a B, etc. Sometimes when students take AP courses, they get more credit for these courses and their GPA may be above a 4.0. This is called a weighted GPA.
For institutions who go by a plus system it would be a C+. For institutions that go by a minus system, it would be a B-.
2.87 is more than halfway above 2.7, which is an 81.7%. Using that logic, it's 1.869945 percentage points above 81.7%, or 83.57 rounded up. This is a low B average, not quite a B-.
Depending on the school's grading system, it could be either a C+ or B-
For schools that grade on a plus system, it would be a C+. For those that grade on a minus system it would be a B-.
On a scale of 0 to 4, a 2.87 is a B+.
C+
C+ or B-
In terms of letter grades, a 3. 48 grade point average falls between an A and a B. A 3. 5 GPA is a definite A.
It would be a letter grade of B+.
above a B average but below an A average
It is a B...
this means that your grades all a's and u have a awesome grade point average (gpa)
D
B-
well in simple terms the grades and credits transfer but don't get calculated into the GPA in the New School
When figured on a 4.0 GPA grading scale a 3.686 means that you have mastered all courses you have taken with at least a low A average. This is considered to be a very successful grade rating.
A 2.72 GPA means that that person made mostly C's. Maybe a couple of B's and A's but the majority of their grades were C's.
If the possible exception to your low GPA is your math and chemistry grades, maybe yeah - you can. If your low GPA grades are represented by your math and chemistry grades - no chance.
Yes you can