It depends on the credit value of each class. For example, if you got an A in a two credit course, you would multiply 2 by the value of an A which is 4.0. If however it was a 3 credit class it would be 3 x 4.0. A B has a value of 3.0. Once you have multiplied the credits by the numerical grade value, add them all together and divide by the total number of credits and that will be the GPA.
IT IS EQUAL TO AN A- so 1 B
On a scale for GPA where A =4,B=3,C=2, and D=1 then GPA = (4 x2) + (3 x 3) + (2x2) all divided by 7 to get average GPA = 3.0
To calculate the GPA, assign point values to each grade: A = 4.0, B = 3.0, and C = 2.0. For 2 As, 1 B, and 1 C, the calculation would be (4.0 + 4.0 + 3.0 + 2.0) / 4 = 3.25. Therefore, the GPA would be 3.25.
If an A = 4 you have (3 + 2 + 2 +1)/4 = 8/4 = 2.0 GPA
B/b+/a
Without knowing the exact score, it can be hard to say, but it would be a B.
Lots. A = 4; B = 3; C = 2; D = 1; F =0. So if one had an A, a C, and a B, their GPA would be 3.0 (B)
b+
2.8791 GPA = B-
To calculate grade points, An A is assigned a 4, B a 3, C a 2, D a 1, and F a zero. In college you take classes for so many hours of credit each week. You may take one for 2 hours credit and one for 3 hours credit. If you take 3 classes for 3 hours and one course for 1 hour and make a B in all of them then you have a 3.0 GPA. The math is (((3*3)*3)+(1*3))/10=30. or a 3.0 GPA. Remember in your order of operations, items in parenthesis are done first. * is multiplication; / is division. If you get a B in the first three classes and a C in the last course your equation changes: (((3*3)*3)+(1*2))/10=29/10=2.9. Thus, a GPA of 2.981 is like a Grade point average of mostly B's and an occasional C. It could also be some A's and even more C's.
No. A 3.0 GPA is a B average. So it is a good GPA
On a GPA scale where A = 4 B = 3 C = 2 and D = 1 then the GPA is (4 + 4 + 4 + 1 + 2 + 2 + 2) divided by 7 = 2.71