A 2.90 GPA is a B minus almost a B. It's adequate to get into many of the respectable schools.
No! then it would say 2.0, you are close but not quite there yet. A 4.0 is a perfect GPA so you are almost at the half way mark.
it equals a c+
c+
no.
2.7 cumulative GPA
Your cumulative GPA is 2.7.
It is indicated on the students official transcript. If will give the semester by semester GPA and the cumulative GPA.
Summa Cum Laude: Students with a cumulative GPA of 3.900 or higherMagna Cum Laude: Students with a cumulative GPA of 3.750 to 3.899Cum Laude: Students with a cumulative GPA of 3.500 to 3.749
For a better future, you should focus more on the cumulative GPA more than the Major GPA.
You will get it back as a semester GPA but never for your cumulative GPA. Let's say you get all A's next semester....you will have a 4.0 GPA for that semester but your cumulative GPA will be different. I suggest shooting for the highest grades possible because even though you won't get your 4.0 cumulative GPA back, you will raise your GPA above a 3.5.Also, do not be so down on yourself. A 3.5 GPA is still pretty good and after you graduate and start looking for jobs, GPA doesn't really matter at all. Get involved with clubs and honor societies....employers love that!
I would say you are a B- student.
AnswerI would recommend nothing less then a 3.7 cumulative GPA and 800 or above on the SATs. Brown University does not have any official GPA requirements though.
A cumulative GPA of 2.00 is the requirement in order to continue PHD especially in the US.
Cumulative GPA is the Overall Graduate Average point in the entire stage of a specific major while the University or college divide them into semesters or years.This GPA is due to the result of ALL courses ( Major and non-Major). While, Major GPA is the Graduate Average point of the Major courses and the Major Elective one, while GER courses and GER Electives are excluded from that domain.
I was accepted into Hope with a 3.3 cumulative GPA and a 24 on my ACT's. Granted, I was coming from a private school with a much harder grading scale.