40 out of 40 comes out to 100%
That would be a low A grade range. It comes out to a 93.
60% comes from tax payers and 40% comes from the federal government. 60% comes from tax payers and 40% comes from the federal government.
A 2.87 cumulative GPA would be the equivalent of a C+ letter grade on a 4.0 scale.
No. A 79 average is 2.4 GPA. Heres a list of all the Grade point averages. 0%-59% => 0 GPA 60% => 0.7 GPA 61% => 0.8 GPA 62% => 0.8 GPA 63% => 0.9 GPA 64% => 1.0 GPA 65% => 1.0 GPA 66% => 1.1 GPA 67% => 1.2 GPA 68% => 1.3 GPA 69% => 1.4 GPA 70% => 1.5 GPA 71% => 1.6 GPA 72% => 1.7 GPA 73% => 1.8 GPA 74% => 1.9 GPA 75% => 2.0 GPA 76% => 2.1 GPA 77% => 2.2 GPA 78% => 2.3 GPA 79% => 2.4 GPA 80% => 2.5 GPA 81% => 2.7 GPA 82% => 2.8 GPA 83% => 2.9 GPA 84% => 3.0 GPA 85% => 3.0 GPA 86% => 3.1 GPA 87% => 3.2 GPA 88% => 3.3 GPA 89% => 3.4 GPA 90% => 3.5 GPA 91% => 3.5 GPA 92% => 3.6 GPA 93% => 3.7 GPA 94% => 3.8 GPA 95% => 3.9 GPA 96% => 3.9 GPA 97% => 4.0 GPA 98% => 4.0 GPA 99% => 4.0 GPA 100% => 4.0 GPA http://qna.educouncil.org/Tests_and_Results/nZxyNXyyynN.html
40
The path to law school is high school --> bachelors degree --> law school. Thus, the high school GPA would be somewhat irrelevant when it comes to law school application provided that the undergraduate GPA of the applicant was good.
200000000000 gpa i like gummi bears
4.0 or higher is ideal. After that it comes down to SAT's and ACT's. Not to mention the stuff you do outside of school.
A 3.17 gpa
The best way to convert percentage into marks is by using the formula where they would multiply the GPA. Example: If the GPA is 3.0, then the equivalent percentage equals 3.0 x 18 + 30 = 74 percent.
No. A 3.0 GPA is a B average. So it is a good GPA