Throughout high school, everyone stresses your grade point average (GPA) as a large part of your college admissions process. While this is absolutely true, many students and parents do not realize not all grades are created equal. Colleges and universities look at your grade point average differently than your high school. In this post, I want to demystify some of the myths (if you even knew there were any!) about a student’s GPA and how colleges use them.
Words to know for this post:
Unweighted- this simply means the student does not get any extra points for more rigorous courses like honors, dual enrollment, Advanced Placement, and so forth. An A in PE would be the same as AP Human Geography.
Weighted- this GPA takes into account a student’s rigor. More points are awarded for more rigorous courses. The more rigor, the more points. Student class rankings are often determined off of this.
Academic Core- These include all courses taken in English, Social Studies, Mathematics, Sciences, and Foreign Language.
Academic Electives- This is sort of a grey area in college admissions. These are courses that students elected to take but are more academic; examples would be Psychology, Human Geography, Speech. Typically these courses are included in the recalculation.
Electives- Electives are the courses that do not fall in the core. These include classes like physical education, computer, business, arts, study hall, and so forth.
What to Know:
1. Not all high schools use the same system! Some high schools use weighted or unweighted, some do not even use the traditional 4.0 scale. This is why many schools will recalculate all GPAs based on the scale they want.
2. Colleges look at and use courses differently in recalculating the GPA.
a. Some colleges will look at ALL course work taken. This includes not only academic core but all electives. Your student may have got an A in AP English, but why did they fail PE?!? That shows poorly in maintaining your responsibilities. Typically what is on your transcript is what they use. **Check what your high school does!! Do they provide the unweighted and/or the weighted?**
b. Some colleges look only at the academic core.
c. Some colleges look academic core and academic electives.
3. Most colleges use the weighted GPA as the best indicator for college success. Why? Well, the more rigorous courses you took in high school and did well in is a good indicator to how you will do in college. One director of admissions said this, “We put more weight on gpa than standardized tests (ACT/ SAT) because we would rather have four years of grit than one day of good test taking”.