Visit the official GED Testing Service website at www.acenet.edu for information or call 1-800-62-MYGED (1-800-626-9433) to find your local GED Testing Center. The center can tell you: * Whether you can take the GED Tests * Where to find the Official GED Practice Tests * Where to find a GED instructional program * How much it costs to take the tests * When the tests are given * Other useful information To locate your nearest GED testing center:
http://www.acenet.edu/resources/GED/center_locator.cfm Visit the official GED Testing Service website at www.acenet.edu for information or call 1-800-62-MYGED (1-800-626-9433) to find your local GED Testing Center. The center can tell you: * Whether you can take the GED Tests * Where to find the Official GED Practice Tests * Where to find a GED instructional program * How much it costs to take the tests * When the tests are given * Other useful information To locate your nearest GED testing center:
http://www.acenet.edu/resources/GED/center_locator.cfm
In 1978-87 GED exams were scored similarly only they added a zero to this one. So if you scored the minimum back then 225 that = 2.25 GPA or in my case 226 = 2.26 ok but they are grading us on a curve so my question is on a scale of 20-80 or 200 - 400 for each of your 5 individual tests 50 or 500 is the median average which = 3.0? But yet if you score a 50 on all of the individual tests 50 × 5 = a score of 250 out of 400 which only = 2.5? Am I misunderstanding this? I know the higher the scores the lower the number of students obviously. I scored a 48 on Arts and Literature but I came in the 43rd Percentile so I'm wondering if I had scored 50 instead of 48 if I would have been in the 50th percentile or 49th? Any help on this would be greatly appreciated. :)
A 2.17 GPA is the lowest score you can get to achieve a C+ average.
No. The requirements are a high score on your ACT tests, usually a 3.5 gpa with extra curricular activities under your belt.
u go to college help .com or gda.com and see.
2.38 C+
Absolutely NOT. This is apples and oranges. Your GPA is your GPA - period. Visit the official GED Testing Service website at www.acenet.edu for information or call 1-800-62-MYGED (1-800-626-9433) to find your local GED Testing Center. The center can tell you: * Whether you can take the GED Tests * Where to find the Official GED Practice Tests * Where to find a GED instructional program * How much it costs to take the tests * When the tests are given * Other useful information To locate your nearest GED testing center: http://www.acenet.edu/resources/GED/center_locator.cfm
A GPA is not needed. You just need a high school diploma or GED.
i would suggest to get to at least a 3.5 GPA and a 28 or higher on the test
2200 or higher for sure. your gpa is too low
you would need a 2.2-4.0 gpa. also you would need to score a 19-26 on your sat's.
== Letter grades (A, B, C, etc.) are not standardized across every high school; that is, an "A" student at one high school may be a "C" student at a more rigorous high school. Therefore, we cannot equate GED test scores to a GPA. We can provide a national percentile rank that tells you where a GED candidate stands in relation to graduating high school seniors. Source: http://www.acenet.edu/
Most colleges would accept with a 3.75 GPA, but the SAT has top score of 1400. Your score is fair, but you could improve it.