I need to know how a C- (worth 2 credits) and a B (worth 2 credits) factors in to a gpa of 1.54. What is the GPA now? Please dont spam i need the exact number please. By the way I dont know if credits even matter
Credits don't matter I think. You would be around a C-C+. Depends. Were these test grades, quiz grades, or homwowrk assignments?
Your gpa for the semester would be 2.35 if those are the only courses factored into it. To calculate your new GPA total, I believe I would need to know the derivation of your current GPA .
no my current gpa is 1.54 -_- i know and iw ent to sumemr school and a got a B and a C- wut would my gpa be after those were factored in im a senior in highschool just started
The average has to be weighted. I can't figure out your new GPA without knowing what grades and how many credits went into your current GPA of 1.54. Say you only took one course, and your GPA for that course was a 4.0. Now assume that your standing GPA is a 1.0, after 50 courses. You can't just average these together for a new GPA of (1.0 + 4.0)/2 = 2.5 - that is, doubling your GPA with just one course, when it only represents 1/50th of your grades. The GPA has to be entirely recalculated.
ok here r grades d+ 2 d. 1 f. 0 C- 2 c- 2 C-2 d 2 d+ 2 c+ 2 c 2 d- 2 d+ 2 d+ 2 c 2 c- 2 d- 2 b- 2 c- 2 b- 2 d- 0 f 0 f 0 f 0 c 2 d- 2 c 2 a- 2 c- 2 C 2 b- 2 The number next to grade is credit and should I include wellness grades? They dont add to Gpa
they averaged to a 1.54 and I just got a b and a c in summerschool da worth to credits how would it average out
The way my school does it is, A - 4 Points B - 3 Points C - 2 Points D - 1 Point F - 0 You then add up all your points and divide it by the number of classes you have. As an example I have 5 A's and 1 B. That is a 23/6 which = 3.8 So in your particular case I would just add all the credits and divide by the number of classes and see if that works.
There are calculation tables all over the internet that you can view. Just go to Google and type in "GPA calculator" or "GPA calculation table" and you shouldn't have any problems figuring it out.