It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
A 4.56 cumulative GPA would be the equivalent of a A+ letter grade on a 4.0 scale. If the GPA was achieved on a 4.5 scale converted to a 4.0 scale, it would convert to 4.05, but still be an A+.
It depends on the institution and how they choose to assign a letter grade to a numerical grade. Strictly speaking, most all institutions equate a 3.5 as a B+, and for institutions who use a minus system the same would be an A-. However, if they are using the x.3 and y.7, then a B- would equal 2.7, a B would equal 3.0, and a B+ would equal a 3.3. The best thing to do is check with the Office of the Registrar at the school you received the grade at.
A 3.47 cumulative GPA would be the equivalent of a B letter grade on a 4.0 scale.
456+40=496
A 3.17 gpa
b+
The most common scale is 4.0
the answer is 456! Ok so I :) lol
3.0
That depends on whether your honors classes were regular high school classes or AP or International Baccalaureate classes, which may have been calculated on a 5.0 GPA scale. A GPA of 4.3 on a 5.0 scale is the equivalent of 3.44 on a 4.0 GPA scale.
I believe on a 4.0 scale the lowest GPA you can have is a 2.5
IT IS EQUAL TO AN A- so 1 B
3
First, it is an excellent GPA and equivalent to a letter grade of A.
If it is based on a 100% scale, yes, it is a good GPA.