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How does the LSAC determine undergraduate GPA? I had attended multiple schools from the same system during my undergraduate and have varying GPAs from each. If the LSAC deferred to the GPA of our graduating institution that would be great ?
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They will count every single class/credit you have taken at each school before getting your first bachelors degree.
I was one of the lucky ones where my LSAC GPA is much higher than my degree-granting school's GPA since I went to diff school before that. haha.
Yup, they count everything, from dual-enrollment classes to retakes. Unfortunately, some people get a nasty surprise when they see their LSAC GPA
yeah! I knew someone who went from a 3.9 to a 3.2 LSAC GPA. sucks for some!!
I just found the LSAC gpa calculator from 7Sage and I think I may have lucked out!! My degree granting institution treats A+ and A as the same 4.0 grade, however LSAC treats A+ as 4.33! ?
Yep! It’s actually really annoying. My college only gives A’s and A- but not A+. My gpa would have been boosted a decent bit if I were allowed to get an A+ lol
yeah, A+'s are 4.3's. I'm fortunate in that I had a few lol
It's different from how a university tends to figure it from stuff like reporting numbers for law school applicants (or probable applicants) at that university.
You should use the 7Sage CAS GPA calculator. Under the "7Sage lsat" header, go to "Admissions," then go to "Resources" and find the calculator there.
Use the grades that are recorded on your transcripts (even if you got an A+ but your school reports only A's, just report an A). That will give you your LSAC GPA.
You can fiddle with it to figure out how your fall semester grades impact your GPA.
Hope this helps!
Yes, have I ranted about this lately? Ugh. LSAC should convert to true 4.0, not 4.33! ::grumble grumble grumble::
(But also I have 1 A+ from my freshman year school that allows them so I’ll take it, ha)