Anonymous wrote:What about UMD? I've looked it up but haven't found a clear answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unweighted GPA’s seem to be the gold standard when measuring students. Even scholarships and merit use UW GPA. So, if that’s the case, is rigor for nothing? Outside of the top 30 colleges, are students better off mixing in easier classes and sweeping up with A’s?
Doesn’t almost every college admissions office recalculate HS GPA based on their own weighting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unweighted GPA’s seem to be the gold standard when measuring students. Even scholarships and merit use UW GPA. So, if that’s the case, is rigor for nothing? Outside of the top 30 colleges, are students better off mixing in easier classes and sweeping up with A’s?
Doesn’t almost every college admissions office recalculate HS GPA based on their own weighting?
Anonymous wrote:Some schools like Michigan recalculate GPA: A+ or A or A- =4.0. B+ or B or B- =3.0. The recalculation process might change your UW GPA much different from your high school UW GPA. Are there other schools use only the absolute value of the grade in the recalculation process?
Anonymous wrote:Unweighted GPA’s seem to be the gold standard when measuring students. Even scholarships and merit use UW GPA. So, if that’s the case, is rigor for nothing? Outside of the top 30 colleges, are students better off mixing in easier classes and sweeping up with A’s?
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that most schools rewriting the gpa. I assume they weight APs but unclear to me what else they weigh.
My son’s taking a really hard class now that is not AP.l but is being taught on an AP level — about half the kids dropped it at the semester because their grades were so bad. I’m proud of him for staying in it and taking the B rather than dropping to the easier course but I doubt he’ll get any credit for that from the colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unweighted GPA’s seem to be the gold standard when measuring students. Even scholarships and merit use UW GPA. So, if that’s the case, is rigor for nothing? Outside of the top 30 colleges, are students better off mixing in easier classes and sweeping up with A’s?
Not true. At all. A lot of public schools use unweighted GPA for admissions and automatic merit aid. Rigor absolutely matters. A B in an AP class has the same mathematical value as an A in the base version of that subject but has more value during the assessment process.
Can you share schools that use weighted GPA’s for scholarships?
Michigan State, WVU, and UMW all use weighted GPA for automatic merit scholarships.
VCU uses weighted GPA for their guaranteed admissions program. The Iowa regents index (which is for admissions) uses weighted GPA too.
I don't get it. Our school doesn't weight GPAs (overseas). So kid takes a AP class and gets an A, it's a 4.0. Kid takes a basketweaving, it's a 4.0.