You have credits enrolled in, and the credits actually earned. A student can enroll for twelve credits, then drop or fail one three credit course. Thus, the enrolled credits would be 12, but the credits earned would be nine. Each grade is assigned quality points. For example a grade of A equals 12 quality points, a B nine quality points, a C six quality points, etc. This is used to calculate the students grade point average (GPA). You add the number of quality points and divide that number by the number of credits taken that semester. This gives you the GPA.
Each grade is assigned quality points. For example A = 12pts, B = 9pts, C = 6pts. The points are used to calculate the students grade point average (GPA). You take total number of quality points and divide that number by the number of credits taken, and that would give you the GPA. Thus, an A and a B would total 21 quality points, divided by 6 credits (if the two courses were 3 credits each) would equal a GPA of 3.5 (letter grade of B+).
It's not that easy. To calculate the GPA, you need to know the total amount of credits earned, the quality point assigned, and the number of credits the course you received the B- in (two credits, three, four, etc.). In other words, you take the total amount of quality points, and divide that by the total number of credits earned.
It's not that easy. To calculate the GPA, you need to know the total amount of credits earned, the quality point assigned, and the number of credits the course you received the B- in (two credits, three, four, etc.). In other words, you take the total amount of quality points, and divide that by the total number of credits earned.
It depends. In order to calculate the GPA, you have to know how many credits the student attempted, and number of credits of each course, the grade of each course which indicates the number of quality points for each course. You total the number of quality points and divide that by the number of credits attempted. Thus, there is not way to tell based on the information you have provided. I can say this though, it will be a very good GPA!
It's not that easy. To calculate the GPA, you need to know the total amount of credits earned, the quality point assigned, and the number of credits the course you received the B- in (two credits, three, four, etc.). In other words, you take the total amount of quality points, and divide that by the total number of credits earned.
It's not that simple. You have to know how many credits in each course and the quality points to each grade. You add the total number of quality points assigned to each grade and divide it by the number of credits completed.
To calculate your cumulative GPA, add up the grade points for all your courses and divide by the total number of credits. Grade points are typically assigned as follows: A4, B3, C2, D1, F0. Multiply the grade points for each course by the number of credits to get the total grade points. Add up all the total grade points and divide by the total number of credits to get your cumulative GPA.
No, an A and an A are not considered the same GPA. An A is typically worth 4.0 points on a GPA scale, while an A is usually worth 4.3 points.
To calculate your cumulative GPA, you need to add up all your grade points from each semester and divide by the total number of credits. Multiply your semester GPA by the number of credits for that semester, then add up these values for all semesters. Divide this total by the total number of credits to get your cumulative GPA.
To calculate cumulative GPA when transferring credits from multiple schools, you need to convert the grades from each school to a common scale (usually a 4.0 scale), then multiply each grade by the number of credits for that course. Add up all the grade points, add up all the credits, and divide the total grade points by the total credits to get your cumulative GPA.
To calculate your cumulative GPA, you need to add up all your grade points from each semester and divide by the total number of credits. Multiply your semester GPA by the number of credits for that semester, then add up these values for all semesters and divide by the total number of credits.