Understanding Weighted Grades: How AP and Honors Classes Affect Your GPA
How does weighted grading work?
Weighted grading assigns different point values to different course levels:
- Standard/Regular courses: A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0
- Honors courses: A = 4.5, B = 3.5, C = 2.5
- AP/IB courses: A = 5.0, B = 4.0, C = 3.0
Example calculation:
| Course | Level | Grade | Unweighted Points | Weighted Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AP Calculus | AP | A | 4.0 | 5.0 |
| Honors English | Honors | B | 3.0 | 3.5 |
| Regular History | Regular | A | 4.0 | 4.0 |
Unweighted GPA: (4.0 + 3.0 + 4.0) ÷ 3 = 3.67
Weighted GPA: (5.0 + 3.5 + 4.0) ÷ 3 = 4.17
Why schools use weighted grades: Rewards students for taking more challenging courses. Prevents students from avoiding AP/Honors classes to protect their GPA. A weighted 4.17 shows you took rigorous courses and performed well, while an unweighted 3.67 would undervalue that achievement.
Your transcript shows a 4.2 GPA. You’re thrilled, that’s above a perfect 4.0! But then your friend with straight As in all regular classes has a 4.0 GPA, while you took five AP courses and got a few Bs. When colleges recalculate your GPA as “unweighted,” your 4.2 becomes a 3.7. What happened?
Understanding both your high school’s weighted scale and the unweighted scale colleges use helps you feel more confident and in control of your academic record. Knowing how both systems work can ease concerns and clarify what colleges see when reviewing your transcript.
This guide explains how weighted grading works, shows calculation examples step-by-step, covers different weighting systems by state and school, and helps you understand when weighted vs. unweighted GPA matters.
What Are Weighted Grades?
The Basic Concept
Unweighted grading (traditional 4.0 scale):
- Every course is treated equally
- A = 4.0 regardless of difficulty
- AP Calculus A = 4.0, Regular PE A = 4.0
Weighted grading (typically 5.0 or higher scale):
- More challenging courses are worth more points
- AP/IB A = 5.0 (or 5.5, or 6.0, depending on school)
- Honors A = 4.5 (or 5.0, varies)
- Regular A = 4.0
The purpose of weighted grading is to reward academic rigor and can also impact your eligibility for scholarships and honors. A higher weighted GPA may open more opportunities for recognition and financial aid, making understanding this system even more important.
Common Weighting Systems
System 1: Standard Weighted (Most Common)
- Regular courses: A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0
- Honors courses: A = 4.5, B = 3.5, C = 2.5
- AP/IB courses: A = 5.0, B = 4.0, C = 3.0
System 2: Full Point Weighted
- Regular courses: A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0
- Honors courses: A = 5.0, B = 4.0, C = 3.0
- AP/IB courses: A = 6.0, B = 5.0, C = 4.0
System 3: Quarter Point Weighted
- Regular courses: A = 4.0, B = 3.0, C = 2.0
- Pre-AP/Pre-IB: A = 4.25, B = 3.25, C = 2.25
- Honors: A = 4.5, B = 3.5, C = 2.5
- AP/IB: A = 5.0, B = 4.0, C = 3.0
System 4: Percentage-Based Weighted
- Regular courses: Normal 4.0 scale
- Honors: Add 5 percentage points to the final grade
- AP/IB: Add 10 percentage points to the final grade
- Then convert to a letter grade
Your school determines which system applies to you. Check your student handbook or ask your counselor.
What Courses Get Weighted?
Typically weighted:
- Advanced Placement (AP) courses
- International Baccalaureate (IB) courses
- Honors courses
- Dual enrollment college courses (sometimes)
- Gifted/talented courses (some schools)
NOT typically weighted:
- Regular/standard courses
- Electives (art, music, PE)
- Remedial courses
- Some career/technical courses
School-specific variations: Some schools weigh only AP/IB. Others weigh Honors + AP/IB, some weigh dual enrollment. Always check your specific school’s policy.
How to Calculate Weighted GPA: Step-by-Step
Example 1: Basic Weighted Calculation
Your semester courses:
| Course | Level | Credit Hours | Grade | Unweighted Points | Weighted Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AP Biology | AP | 1.0 | A (93%) | 4.0 | 5.0 |
| Honors English | Honors | 1.0 | B (87%) | 3.0 | 3.5 |
| Regular Algebra II | Regular | 1.0 | A (95%) | 4.0 | 4.0 |
| Regular Spanish II | Regular | 1.0 | B (85%) | 3.0 | 3.0 |
| PE | Regular | 0.5 | A (98%) | 4.0 | 4.0 |
Unweighted GPA calculation:
- Total points = (4.0 × 1.0) + (3.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (3.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 0.5)
- Total points = 4.0 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 3.0 + 2.0 = 16.0
- Total credits = 1.0 + 1.0 + 1.0 + 1.0 + 0.5 = 4.5
Unweighted GPA = 16.0 ÷ 4.5 = 3.56
Weighted GPA calculation:
- Total weighted points = (5.0 × 1.0) + (3.5 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (3.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 0.5)
- Total weighted points = 5.0 + 3.5 + 4.0 + 3.0 + 2.0 = 17.5
- Total credits = 4.5 (same)
Weighted GPA = 17.5 ÷ 4.5 = 3.89
Result:
- Unweighted GPA: 3.56
- Weighted GPA: 3.89
- Difference: 0.33 points
Example 2: Heavy AP Course Load
Your semester courses:
| Course | Level | Credits | Grade | Weighted Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AP Calculus BC | AP | 1.0 | A | 5.0 |
| AP US History | AP | 1.0 | B | 4.0 |
| AP Chemistry | AP | 1.0 | A | 5.0 |
| Honors English | Honors | 1.0 | A | 4.5 |
| Regular Spanish III | Regular | 1.0 | A | 4.0 |
| PE | Regular | 0.5 | A | 4.0 |
Weighted GPA:
- Points = (5.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (5.0 × 1.0) + (4.5 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 0.5)
- Points = 5.0 + 4.0 + 5.0 + 4.5 + 4.0 + 2.0 = 24.5
- Credits = 5.5
Weighted GPA = 24.5 ÷ 5.5 = 4.45
Unweighted GPA:
- Points = (4.0 × 1.0) + (3.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 1.0) + (4.0 × 0.5)
- Points = 4.0 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 4.0 + 4.0 + 2.0 = 21.0
Unweighted GPA = 21.0 ÷ 5.5 = 3.82
Result:
- Unweighted GPA: 3.82
- Weighted GPA: 4.45
- Difference: 0.63 points
Why the large difference: Three AP courses with As contribute extra points. The one B in AP still counts as a 4.0-weighted grade (same as a regular A).
Example 3: Understanding Your Transcript
Scenario: Your transcript shows “GPA: 4.31,” but you got some Bs.
Your cumulative record:
First Year:
- 2 Honors, 4 Regular courses
- Mostly As, two Bs
- Weighted GPA: 4.15
Sophomore Year:
- 3 Honors, 3 Regular courses
- All As except one B
- Weighted GPA: 4.33
Junior Year:
- 4 AP, 1 Honors, 1 Regular
- Mix of As and Bs
- Weighted GPA: 4.40
Cumulative weighted: 4.31
What this means: Your 4.31 reflects taking progressively harder courses. If calculated unweighted, it would be approximately 3.7-3.8. Colleges see both numbers.
Use the weighted grade calculator to automatically compute your weighted GPA.
Common Weighting Scenarios and Calculations
Scenario 1: All Regular Courses
Course load:
- 6 regular courses
- All As (4.0 each)
Unweighted GPA: 4.0
Weighted GPA: 4.0
Why they’re the same: No weighted courses, so both calculations are identical.
Scenario 2: Mixed Course Load (Typical)
Course load:
- 2 AP courses (A and B)
- 2 Honors courses (both As)
- 2 Regular courses (both As)
Calculation:
| Type | Grade | Unweighted | Weighted |
|---|---|---|---|
| AP | A | 4.0 | 5.0 |
| AP | B | 3.0 | 4.0 |
| Honors | A | 4.0 | 4.5 |
| Honors | A | 4.0 | 4.5 |
| Regular | A | 4.0 | 4.0 |
| Regular | A | 4.0 | 4.0 |
Unweighted: 22.0 ÷ 6 = 3.67
Weighted: 26.0 ÷ 6 = 4.33
Difference: 0.66 points
Scenario 3: All AP Courses
Course load:
- 5 AP courses
- 4 As, 1 B
Unweighted: (4.0+4.0+4.0+4.0+3.0) ÷ 5 = 3.8
Weighted: (5.0+5.0+5.0+5.0+4.0) ÷ 5 = 4.8
Difference: 1.0 point
This is why valedictorians at competitive high schools often have weighted GPAs above 5.0; they took all AP/IB courses and earned mostly As.
Scenario 4: Honors with Lower Grades vs. Regular with Higher Grades
Student A:
- Takes Honors English, earns B (3.5 weighted)
Student B:
- Takes Regular English, earns A (4.0 weighted)
Who has a higher weighted GPA in this course? Student B (4.0 > 3.5)
But consider: If Student A’s full schedule has 4 Honors earning Bs (3.5 each) and 2 Regular earning As (4.0 each):
- Weighted GPA = (3.5+3.5+3.5+3.5+4.0+4.0) ÷ 6 = 3.67
If Student B’s full schedule has all Regular earning As (4.0 each):
- Weighted GPA = 4.0
Student B has a higher weighted GPA in this scenario.
College perspective: Most colleges value Student A’s transcript more highly despite a lower weighted GPA, because Student A challenged themselves with harder courses. This is why colleges recalculate to unweighted or use their own weighting formulas.
Different Weighting Systems by State and School
State-Mandated Weighting Systems
Florida:
- Honors: 0.5 bonus points
- AP/IB/AICE/Dual Enrollment: 1.0 bonus points
- Applied to 4.0 scale (AP A = 5.0)
Texas:
- Local districts determine weighting
- Common: Regular 4.0, Pre-AP/Honors 5.0, AP/IB 6.0
- Some districts: No weighting at all
California:
- The UC/CSU system uses its own weighting formula
- Only 10th-11th grade honors/AP courses
- Maximum 8 semesters of weighted courses count
- Capped weighted GPA (can’t exceed a certain limit even with many APs)
North Carolina:
- State-mandated 6.0 scale
- Regular: 4.0, Honors: 5.0, AP/IB: 6.0
Georgia:
- Regular: 4.0, Honors: 4.5, AP/IB: 5.0
- Rigor points added to GPA for transcript purposes
School District Variations
Example: School District A
- Weights AP/IB only
- Honors = Regular
- AP A = 5.0
Example: School District B
- Weights, Honors, and AP/IB
- Honors A = 4.5, AP A = 5.0
Example: School District C
- No weighting at all
- Everything on a 4.0 scale
- Valedictorian determined by unweighted GPA
Example: School District D
- Pre-AP: 4.25
- Honors: 4.5
- AP: 5.0
- IB: 5.5
Why this matters: You can’t compare weighted GPAs across schools using different systems. A 4.3 at one school might be more impressive than a 4.6 at another, depending on weighting policies and course rigor.
How Colleges Handle Weighted GPAs
College Recalculation Process
What most selective colleges do:
Step 1: Strip all weighting
- Recalculate GPA on unweighted 4.0 scale
- Ignore high school’s weighted GPA entirely
Step 2: Focus on core academic courses
- Include: English, Math, Science, Social Studies, Foreign Language
- Exclude: PE, Electives (art, music), Religious studies (at some schools)
Step 3: Apply their own weighting (sometimes)
- Some colleges apply their own weighted formula
- Others stay purely unweighted
- Varies by institution
Step 4: Evaluate rigor separately
- Course rigor is assessed independently from GPA
- Did you take the hardest courses available?
- AP/IB course count matters
Result: Your 4.4 weighted grade might become 3.7 unweighted in college review. But colleges also see that you took 8 AP courses while maintaining a 3.7 GPA, which is valued.
Examples: Specific College Approaches
UC (University of California) System:
- Recalculates using a specific formula
- Only 10th-11th-grade a-g courses
- Maximum 8 semesters of honors/AP weight
- Weighted capped GPA (often mid-4.0s maximum)
- Also reports uncapped weighted GPA
Stanford University:
- Recalculates on the unweighted 4.0 scale
- Academic courses only
- Evaluates course rigor separately using the course difficulty rating
MIT:
- Primarily uses unweighted GPA
- Course rigor critical (expect AP Calc, AP Physics, etc.)
- GPA is less important than course selection + grades in hard courses
State Universities (Many):
- Use the weighted GPA as submitted
- Some recalculate using the state formula
- Often auto-admit based on weighted GPA thresholds
When Weighted GPA Matters Most
Class rank:
- Weighted GPA often determines valedictorian/salutatorian
- Some schools: top 10% based on weighted GPA
- Affects automatic admissions (Texas Top 10%, California ELC)
State scholarship programs:
- Florida Bright Futures: Uses weighted GPA
- Georgia HOPE: Uses weighted GPA
- Many state merit programs consider weighted
Initial screening:
- Large state universities may screen applicants by weighted GPA
- First review: weighted GPA + test scores
- Detailed review: look deeper
High school honors:
- Honor roll cutoffs often use weighted GPA
- NHS eligibility might use weighted
- Academic awards based on weighted
When weighted GPA matters LESS:
Highly selective colleges:
- Recalculate to unweighted
- Focus on rigor independently
- Your weighted 4.5 vs. 4.3 makes little difference
Out-of-state applications:
- Forced to use an unweighted or own formula
- Different weighting systems across states
- Colleges can’t meaningfully compare
Strategic Course Selection: Weighted GPA Considerations
The Balancing Act
Question: Should I take AP and risk a B, or take regular and guarantee an A?
Weighted GPA impact:
Taking AP, earning a B:
- Weighted points: 4.0
- Shows rigor
- Lower unweighted GPA (3.0)
Taking Regular, earning A:
- Weighted points: 4.0
- Same weighted contribution as AP B
- Higher unweighted GPA (4.0)
College perspective: Most prefer AP B over Regular A, especially for selective schools. Shows you challenged yourself.
When Regular A might be better:
- If you’re already taking 4+ other AP courses (diminishing returns)
- If the subject isn’t relevant to your intended major
- If you need to protect GPA for automatic scholarship thresholds
The Weighted GPA Optimization Strategy
First Year:
- 1-2 Honors courses
- Mostly regular courses
- Build a foundation, adjust to high school
Sophomore Year:
- 2-3 Honors courses
- Consider 1 AP if ready (often AP Human Geo or AP World History)
- Increase rigor gradually
Junior Year:
- 3-5 AP courses (most rigorous year)
- Focus on major-related APs
- Weighted GPA boost before college apps
Senior Year:
- 3-4 AP courses
- Maintain rigor (colleges see senior schedule)
- Don’t completely succumb to senioritis out
Result: Progressive rigor increase. Weighted GPA climbs each year. The senior year schedule is still challenging but sustainable.
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Loading too many APs too early
- Freshman taking 3 APs, burning out
- Better: Build up gradually
Mistake 2: Avoiding all weighted courses to keep a perfect 4.0
- Results in unweighted 4.0 but weak rigor
- Selective colleges reject for lack of challenge
Mistake 3: Taking weighted courses you can’t handle
- Earning Cs and Ds in AP courses
- Weighted C (3.0) still hurts GPA and doesn’t show mastery
Mistake 4: Ignoring unweighted GPA
- Focusing only on weighted
- Then, they are shocked when colleges recalculate lower
Strategic approach: Take the hardest courses you can succeed in (B+ or better). Mix of weighted and regular. Prioritize weighted courses in subjects related to your intended major or strengths.
Understanding Your High School’s Specific System
Where to Find Your School’s Weighting Policy
Student handbook:
- Usually contains a full GPA calculation explanation
- List the courses that are weighted
- Shows point values for each level
School counselor:
- Can explain your specific system
- Provide examples
- Calculate your GPA for you
School website:
- Academic policies section
- Course catalog (often notes which courses are weighted)
Transcript:
- Should indicate whether the reported GPA is weighted or unweighted
- Sometimes shows both
Key Questions to Ask
1. What is our weighting scale?
- 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, or other?
- What’s the maximum possible GPA?
2. Which course levels are weighted?
- Just AP/IB, or Honors too?
- Pre-AP/Pre-IB weighted?
- Is dual enrollment weighted?
3. How much weight is added?
- 0.5 points? 1.0 point? Other?
- Same for Honors and AP, or different?
4. Are all weighted courses weighted equally?
- AP English = AP Art = same weight?
- Or different weights for different subjects?
5. What courses are excluded from GPA?
- PE counted?
- Electives counted?
- Pass/fail courses?
6. How is class rank determined?
- Weighted or unweighted GPA?
- Matters for the top 10%, valedictorian
Interpreting Your Transcript
If the transcript shows “GPA: 4.32”:
Questions to determine meaning:
- Is this weighted or unweighted? (likely weighted if >4.0)
- What scale? (4.0, 5.0, 6.0?)
- What’s the highest GPA in your class? (for context)
- How many weighted courses did you take?
If the transcript shows “Unweighted: 3.75, Weighted: 4.28”:
What this tells you:
- You took weighted courses (difference of 0.53)
- Unweighted shows actual mastery (3.75 = solid B+/A- average)
- Weighted shows rigor + performance (4.28 = above perfect 4.0)
Colleges will see both numbers.
Use the GPA calculator to verify your school’s calculation and understand your standing.
Weighted Grades and College Admissions Reality
What Actually Matters to Colleges
Selective colleges care about (in order):
- Course rigor (did you take the hardest courses available?)
- Grades in rigorous courses (As and Bs in AP > As in all regular)
- Unweighted GPA (actual mastery level)
- Weighted GPA (shows you challenged yourself)
- Upward trend (improving GPA over time)
Less selective colleges care about:
- Weighted GPA (often used as submitted)
- Meeting minimum thresholds (3.0 weighted, etc.)
- Course rigor (still valued but less critical)
The Transcript Holistic Review
Admission officers look at:
Not just: “GPA is 4.3.”
But:
- What courses did you take? (all APs? all regular?)
- What grades did you earn in the hardest courses? (As in AP or Cs?)
- How does rigor compare to classmates? (took 8 APs vs. school offers 15)
- What’s your unweighted GPA? (Is it weighted, inflated by the weighting system?)
- Upward or downward trend? (started 3.5, ended 4.2 is good)
Example comparison:
Student A:
- Weighted GPA: 4.5
- Unweighted: 3.6
- Course load: 10 AP courses, 5 As, 5 Bs
Student B:
- Weighted GPA: 4.0
- Unweighted: 4.0
- Course load: All regular courses, all As
Who gets admitted to Stanford? Likely Student A, despite a lower unweighted GPA. Showed willingness to challenge themselves in the hardest courses available.
Who gets a merit scholarship at a state university? Possibly Student B, if the scholarship is based on a weighted GPA cutoff and Student B meets it.
Understanding Competitiveness
Your weighted 4.2 GPA is competitive if:
- You took the most rigorous courses available
- Weighted reflects actual rigor, not grade inflation
- Unweighted is still strong (3.6+)
Your weighted 4.2 might NOT be competitive if:
- The school offers 20 APs, but you only took 3
- Weighted boosted by the school’s generous weighting system
- Unweighted is weak (3.2 or lower)
Context is everything.
Calculating Weighted vs. Unweighted: Practice Examples
Practice Problem 1
Your courses:
- AP English: A (92%)
- Honors Math: B (85%)
- Regular Science: A (94%)
- Regular History: B (87%)
System: AP = 5.0 (A), Honors = 4.5 (A), Regular = 4.0 (A)
Calculate both GPAs:
Unweighted:
- English A = 4.0
- Math B = 3.0
- Science A = 4.0
- History B = 3.0
- Total = 14.0 ÷ 4 = 3.5
Weighted:
- English A (AP) = 5.0
- Math B (Honors) = 3.5
- Science A (Regular) = 4.0
- History B (Regular) = 3.0
- Total = 15.5 ÷ 4 = 3.875
Answer: Unweighted 3.5, Weighted 3.875
Practice Problem 2
Your courses (all 1 credit each):
- AP Biology: B (88%)
- AP US History: A (91%)
- Honors English: A (93%)
- Regular Algebra II: A (96%)
- Regular Spanish: B (84%)
- PE (0.5 credit): A (100%)
Calculate weighted GPA:
Weighted points:
- AP Bio B = 4.0 × 1.0 = 4.0
- AP History A = 5.0 × 1.0 = 5.0
- Honors English A = 4.5 × 1.0 = 4.5
- Regular Alg A = 4.0 × 1.0 = 4.0
- Regular Spanish B = 3.0 × 1.0 = 3.0
- PE A = 4.0 × 0.5 = 2.0
Total: 22.5 points ÷ 5.5 credits = 4.09
Use the weighted grade calculator to check your work and calculate your own GPA.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a weighted 4.0 good?
It depends on context:
If your school’s maximum weighted GPA is 4.5:
- 4.0 weighted = good but not top tier
- Took some weighted courses, earned mostly Bs in them
- Or took a few weighted courses with As
If your school’s maximum weighted GPA is 5.0 or 6.0:
- 4.0 weighted = below average for competitive students
- Took regular courses or low grades in weighted
Unweighted 4.0 is always excellent (perfect straight-A average).
Better question: What’s your unweighted GPA? That shows actual mastery level.
Can you have a 5.0 GPA?
Yes, if:
- Your school uses a 5.0 or higher weighted scale
- You take all AP/IB courses
- You earn all As
Example: 6 AP courses, all As = (5.0+5.0+5.0+5.0+5.0+5.0) ÷ 6 = 5.0 weighted GPA
Some schools even have 6.0 scales, allowing GPAs above 5.0.
But note: Colleges will recalculate this to the unweighted 4.0 scale. Your 5.0 weighted grade becomes 4.0 unweighted if all grades were As.
Do colleges prefer weighted or unweighted GPAs?
Selective colleges primarily use unweighted grades because:
- Eliminates variations across high schools’ weighting systems
- Shows actual achievement level
- Evaluates course rigor separately
Less selective colleges often use weighted grades because:
- Rewards students who challenge themselves
- Easier than recalculating thousands of transcripts
- Many state schools use weighted grades for auto-admit
Most colleges look at both, plus your course schedule, to get the full picture.
Should I take Honors/AP to boost weighted GPA?
Yes, if:
- You can earn a B+ or better
- Subject is relevant to your strengths/interests
- School/state scholarships use weighted GPA thresholds
No, if:
- You’d earn C or lower (weighted C = 3.0, hurts GPA even weighted)
- You’re already taking 5+ other APs (diminishing returns)
- You need to protect an unweighted GPA for a specific scholarship requiring a 4.0
Strategic approach: Take the hardest courses you can succeed in. If you can handle Honors and earn an A or B, take it. If you’d struggle to pass, a regular course is better.
How much can weighted courses boost my GPA?
Typical boost: 0.3 to 0.8 points
Depends on:
- How many weighted courses you take (more = bigger boost)
- Grades in those courses (As provide more boost than Bs)
- Your school’s weighting system (0.5 vs 1.0 vs 2.0 added points)
Example calculations:
All regular courses, all As:
- Unweighted: 4.0
- Weighted: 4.0
- Boost: 0.0
Half weighted (AP), half regular, all As:
- Unweighted: 4.0
- Weighted: 4.5
- Boost: 0.5
All AP courses, all As:
- Boost: 1.0
- Unweighted: 4.0
- Weighted: 5.0
Understanding Both Numbers
Weighted GPA rewards academic rigor. It tells your school, and sometimes colleges, that you challenged yourself with difficult courses and succeeded. A 4.3 weighted GPA shows you didn’t take the easy path to straight As in regular courses.
But weighted GPA alone doesn’t tell the full story. Your unweighted GPA shows your actual mastery level across all courses. A 3.7 unweighted in all AP courses is more impressive than a 4.0 unweighted in all regular courses, even though the numbers suggest otherwise.
Understanding both weighted and unweighted GPAs helps you:
- Interpret your transcript accurately
- Set realistic goals for improvement
- Make strategic course selection decisions
- Understand what colleges actually see when reviewing your application
- Determine scholarship eligibility (weighted vs unweighted requirements)
Calculate both numbers using the weighted grade calculator. Track them throughout high school. Challenge yourself with rigorous courses, but don’t sacrifice all your grades for the sake of course difficulty. The sweet spot: hardest courses you can excel in, not the hardest courses period.
Your weighted GPA might impress at the state scholarship office. Your unweighted GPA might matter more to Stanford. Both numbers together, combined with your actual course schedule, tell the complete story of your academic achievement.
Related Calculators:
- Weighted Grade Calculator: Calculate weighted semester or cumulative GPA
- GPA Calculator: Calculate unweighted GPA from current courses
- High School GPA Calculator: Track both weighted and unweighted over 4 years
- Final Grade Calculator: Calculate the needed final exam scores for the target weighted grade
- Grade Calculator: Track individual course grades throughout the semester
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