no good luck at mcdonalds jk what your saying is to broad i need more specific information but what from what it looks like that isn't bad but it isn't great if your sats are over 1200 youre good
no
3.7-4.0 unweighted. Lots of honors and AP classes
There are two types of GPAs that high schools can report to colleges. Depending on your high school, your transcript can report a weighted GPA or an unweighted GPA (or both). Check with your guidance counselor if you're unsure of your school's policy.A weighted GPA is going to give you brownie points for challenging yourself with harder classes. For example, Advanced Placement and Honors classes are generally more difficult and demanding than Academic classes are. Therefore, many schools offer an extra quality point that can be added to the GPA to "make up" for the difficulty. For example, a "B" in an AP class may be translated into an "A" in an academic class, based on a weighted GPA. Weighted GPAs can also factor in any +'s you might have. For example, an A+ would be given extra points over an A.An unweighted GPA however strips all these brownie points away and leaves you with exactly what you've earned in your classes. A B is a B is a B, according to an unweighted GPA, and an A+ becomes a regular A. In the American education system used by most high schools, the highest unweighted GPA is a 4.0. (Weighted varies widely).SAMPLE GPA SCALEGrade Earned/ UW GPA/ W GPAA....................4.0...........5.0B....................3.0...........4.0C....................2.0...........3.0D....................1.0...........2.0F................No credit......1.0It's important that you challenge yourself with AP/Honors classes. The weighting can really help out your GPA. You should be warned though, most colleges will recalculate weighted GPAs on their own scale (which is always unweighted).
College prep courses are not weighted, so your gpa, both weighted and unweighted, is a 3.34. The only way to get above a 4.0 is to take either honors or AP classes. If its bad or not depends on what kind of school you want to go to, and remember, colleges don't only look at gpa, they also look at standardized test scores (SAT and ACT) and extracurriculars.
It depends particularly on the classes that you are taking when you received that average. If the classes are weighted, honors, A.P. Then it is very good but it is dependent on the level of classes
It depends on the grading scale. Using a 4 point unweighted scale: No. Each class is of equal value. You can't weight your honors classes to push you over the four point oh mark. Using a 5 point weighted or unweighted scale: Yes. Some schools use this grading scale where instead of 4 being the highest, 5 is highest. Since 5 is the highest, you can definitely get higher than a 4. Using a 4 point weighted scale: Yes. If you have some honors classes, they will be weighted, which means they count for more. It is possible that by weighting your classes, you might have over a 4.0. Usually if it is above, it is not drastically above, but it is by a little bit.
Many colleges offer human resource classes. The University of Kansas, the University of Florida, the University of North Carolina, and the University of Iowa all offer human resource classes.
Answer? I want to know!
If every grade at your D's school is worth 4.0, including AP and honors classes, that means that her school runs on a completely UNWEIGHTED system. In some schools, AP and honors classes are "weighted" -- adjusted to account for class difficulty. In weighted systems, AP and honors classes are worth 5.0 credits; A = 5, B = 4, C = 3, D = 2, etc. So, if you were to have all APs and all Bs, your weighted GPA would be 4.0.Weighted GPAs are pretty pointless though, colleges mainly care about unweighted GPAs.It still doesn't make much sense unless colleges actually have their internal weighting system.If you have a 4.0 system, and then for AP classes grade on a 5.0 system and combine the grades it may be difficult for colleges to compare. I assume colleges have a pretty sophisticated way then to compare. I would be curious if colleges scale everything back to a 4.0 scale internally to compare and contrast candidates.When students give their GPA on this post, they don't often point out what sort of grading system it is.I have heard of some schools using a 4.3 school with A+ being the highest etc. But I don't consider this a 4.0 scale then, it would be a 4.3 scale.Do college applications actually request weighted or unweighted calculations?The difference makes it hard to predict somethings. For example, my daughter received a brouchure from University of Miami. It says average weighted GPA for admitted students is 4.2. What does this mean?Is is giving AP classes a 5.0 scale, as suggested above. If so, this isn't a very high GPA.If it is on a 4.3 scale, with AP classes given a one/third step increase (for example an A- gets a 4.0 instead of a 3.66 and an A gets a 4.3), then it is pretty good.If so, how does a school like Miami calculate from a school that does not have a weighted system. Do they actually go through a transcript and assign a high score to some grades and recalculate.It seems easier to simply use an unweighted 4.0 system and then judge the difficulty of the courses in evaluating an applicant.This means that 5.6 does not exactly exist. If it did, you would be the smartest.
7.0 if your in IB (international Baccalaureate) allows you to get a 7.0 because all your core classes will be IB plus taking as many AP classes as possible my IB administrator told me 7.0 is the highest possible GPA IB is the highest high school diploma you can get in the world its valid through t the world meaning u can go anywhere in the world and they will accept your diploma and also you can get into any college or university with ease with an IB diploma
From the Stetson University website: "Stetson University attracts a high-caliber student. The average GPA of a student who starts at Stetson University is over 3.78. This is a combined weighted and unweighted GPA. The majority of students come from a strong background of advanced coursework including Honors, Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, and Dual Enrollment classes. The median SAT scores were 1030-1220. Beyond this, the typical student was an active leader in the school or community."
Yes, if that's your unweighted GPA (no extra weight for honors classes). The University of South Carolina puts more of an emphasis on you SAT score, however. So if you have at least an 1100 on the SAT and that GPA, you should be able to get in.