| If you only got A minuses, I would say you have straight A minuses. So I would only say straight As for all As with no A minuses. |
Why do you say that? |
| My son recently informed me that while all C’s, do you get degrees all C minuses do not get degrees. |
| Why would you ever need to say “straight A’s”? |
See, I live a life where this information is not relevant to anyone, so I would not say this. |
It says A, right? What am I missing? |
And no A+'s right? |
I get he never got an A-. |
bet not get |
Do you not see the little minus sign next to the A? That is what you are missing. An A is an A. An A- is an A-. Straight A's means that you got only A's. If you got A's and A-'s, then you say that you got all A's and A-'s. Seems pretty simple to me. |
I believe (??) this post is a spin off of the post about what it takes to get into UVA. Someone said basically straight A’s, and someone wondered if that included A-‘s. In that context, no, they are not the same. UVA is not going to accept your FCPS student with a 3.7 unweighted GPA. |
Except if you go to a HS where a 90 is an A, you get to say I have all As. If you go to a HS where 92 is an A- then you have to say you didn't get all As. Doesn't make sense in all contexts. |
Why doesn't it make sense? Some schools have different grading systems, and the grades are worth different amounts with regard to GPA. It is what it is... |
Our high school district does not give minus/plus only straight letter grades. DD definitely works hard to squeak into the A zone but I can see how that would not feel fair to other students who have high A's. |
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An A- , A and A+ are all As.
If you are calculating GPA then you count it otherwise to get the exact number. |