Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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...
Kid A has all 90s in all classes, has a 4.0 GPA and can say, I received all As in HS.
Kid B (in a HS that distinguishes between A and A-) has 99s in all but 2 classes where she scored a 92. She has a lower GPA and cannot say, I received all As in HS.
I agree with you. Straight A's is a 4.0. My kid that has a mix of A and A- (at a school without A+) does not have straight As (except at University of California where they count A and A- the same!! )
I can't. A mix of As and A-s still contains ONLY As.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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...
Kid A has all 90s in all classes, has a 4.0 GPA and can say, I received all As in HS.
Kid B (in a HS that distinguishes between A and A-) has 99s in all but 2 classes where she scored a 92. She has a lower GPA and cannot say, I received all As in HS.
I agree with you. Straight A's is a 4.0. My kid that has a mix of A and A- (at a school without A+) does not have straight As (except at University of California where they count A and A- the same!! )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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...
Kid A has all 90s in all classes, has a 4.0 GPA and can say, I received all As in HS.
Kid B (in a HS that distinguishes between A and A-) has 99s in all but 2 classes where she scored a 92. She has a lower GPA and cannot say, I received all As in HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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...
Kid A has all 90s in all classes, has a 4.0 GPA and can say, I received all As in HS.
Kid B (in a HS that distinguishes between A and A-) has 99s in all but 2 classes where she scored a 92. She has a lower GPA and cannot say, I received all As in HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm assuming that you're talking about for college applications, and that probably depends on the college. When someone says that you need all As to get into MIT, they probably don't mean that all A minuses is good enough. When someone says that you need all As to get into your state flagship, a few A minuses is probably ok
OP here. Not just asking for college applications.
When you say "My kid has straight A's", does that mean there are not A minuses?
Are you saying that including the A- depends on the context? And more so, if the context is college apps, it depends on the selectivity of the school?
See, I live a life where this information is not relevant to anyone, so I would not say this.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is A- considered an A?
It says A, right? What am I missing?
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm assuming that you're talking about for college applications, and that probably depends on the college. When someone says that you need all As to get into MIT, they probably don't mean that all A minuses is good enough. When someone says that you need all As to get into your state flagship, a few A minuses is probably ok
OP here. Not just asking for college applications.
When you say "My kid has straight A's", does that mean there are not A minuses?
Are you saying that including the A- depends on the context? And more so, if the context is college apps, it depends on the selectivity of the school?
See, I live a life where this information is not relevant to anyone, so I would not say this.