I finished a Canadian university, which gives out A+ with a GPA of 4.125/4.5. If I covert my GPA to 4.0, my GPA should be 3.6. LSAC converted my grades to 3.88.
Am I missing something? Is LSAC's GPA out 4.3? Did I convert my incorrectly?
I finished a Canadian university, which gives out A+ with a GPA of 4.125/4.5. If I covert my GPA to 4.0, my GPA should be 3.6. LSAC converted my grades to 3.88.
Am I missing something? Is LSAC's GPA out 4.3? Did I convert my incorrectly?
@ said:
LSAC weighs grades super hard. B-'s are not B's, for example. They are less-than-B's. On the flip side of that coin, an A+ gets you an extra bump, as they see them as 4.33. And they count every grade you have. ever. had., even if you redid them and had the old grades undone. So, for most people, their LSAC gpa will wind up being less than their normal GPA. For some, significantly less. Because the LSAC are evil (there's another thread on this general concept). :lol:
Thanks for your reply! I was expecting my GPA to be lower after LSAC converted it, but it got a boost.
My school GPA is 4.125/4.5 and if i convert my GPA it should have been 3.6/4.0 but on my Academic Summary it's 3.88 (assuming that this is out of 4.0 and not 4.3). I don't get this...
@ said:
It should list your lsac calculated gpa, too . If you go all the way down, you see "Degree (summary) GPA:" and across from it, a "Cumulative GPA". The Cumulative is your lsac calculated GPA.
I believe the scale is traditionally to 4.0. Anything above that is icing on the cake. I think Harvard's 75%ile is 3.97.
Thank you
I didn't expect my 4.125/4.5 to be converted to 3.88/4.0 (I thought it would be 3.66/4.0). I okay with this boost.
In the Academic Summary Report provided by LSAC, I see my Degree GPA- is my re-calculated GPA out of 4.0 or out of 4.33? Thanks!
@ said:
They convert to a 4.0 scale, but their scale does allow for A+ to count for 4.33. (Which I've complained a hundred times but still will, drives me crazy because my school doesn't give A+, highest grade is an A. I wish LSAC would do a 4.0 scale, ugh.)
Here's a link to their grade conversion: https://www.lsac.org/applying-law-school/jd-application-process/jd-application-requirements/academic-record#GradeConversionTable
Thanks for this!