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-   -   What is your college GPA? (http://www.gamingforce.org/forums/showthread.php?t=26482)

IdleChill Nov 4, 2007 04:36 PM

3.3ish in my senior year (undergrad degree). Screw all you smart people. Especially you, Deni. >=|

I go to a football school.

SpaceOddity Nov 4, 2007 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlleyDog (Post 526779)
I really don't like GPAs because each school is different and it depends mostly on luck, really, and which instructors and classes you pick. Like some schools don't use the plus and minus system, and some instructors are jerks and openly admit to never giving out As on principle. One person's 3.0 could be like another person's 3.5. Sure, GPA often is an indicator of how much a person has blown off studying, but because schools and even classes within each school have different grading systems, I don't think it's fair to say someone who has, for instance, a 3.0 isn't trying hard enough.

That is absolutely true. I think I have a 3.5 right now... I used to have a 3.7-3.8 but it went down thanks to a couple of insanely harsh teachers that never gave out A's. I put the same amount of work and effort in, but it all depends on luck & and what instructors I end up with.

Sian Nov 4, 2007 04:50 PM

I have no idea, our education system is completely different. What's the GPA if you get mainly As but a couple of Bs?

Ridan Krad Nov 4, 2007 04:54 PM

My GPA was about 3.4 when I graduated college. Time (and lots of study) will tell how my law school GPA will fair.

I personally think that GPA provides mainly a measurement of a person's work ethic. Their might be a correlation between intelligence and GPA, but I don't think it's a hard-and-fast rule. For instance, if it were a true indicator of intelligence, that would mean that my intelligence jumped dramatically between my senior year of high school (a scatter of grades averaging a C) and my first year of college (3.9 GPA) with my intelligence then stagnating after that to the 3.4 range. That just seems absurd.

RacinReaver Nov 4, 2007 05:44 PM

I think grades in some sorts of classes do actually test a bit of intelligence instead of study habits and work ethic. Think of all those times you've had tests that didn't actually test you on any material covered in the class, but instead asked about other things that you had to really think about to see how it connected (I'm looking at you every goddamned physics class I've taken). Studying a ton for those classes never really helped much, it was all about how you could figure out the tricks and be able to grasp material from past classes (anyone can cram for a test, it's a lot more difficult to retain knowledge from year to year).

Acro-nym Nov 4, 2007 06:06 PM

I think it was 3.54 or something close to that the last I checked. I don't expect that to remain after this semester.:(

Adara Nov 4, 2007 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sian (Post 527051)
I have no idea, our education system is completely different. What's the GPA if you get mainly As but a couple of Bs?

Maybe this will help you and anyone else needing a hand calculating their GPA: GPA calculator. It should help if they measure "hours" the same over there as over here.

Gechmir Nov 4, 2007 07:05 PM

2.85 or so here (BS Geophysics). I put in tons of study time despite my multiple jobs... However, some classes still just outright kicked my ass, regardless of the time invested. It just seemed *impossible* for me to have done better than I did, given the knowledge at-hand. (ie: "Oh well this problem had a trick from a very advanced version. Someone got it so I'm gonna count it." And some dude with Pi on his shirt nearby would look pleased with himself) But I tell you, I worked my ass off so I could break 3.00 (which was nice to have on a resume; 3.00+), but I never pulled it off. I'd always hit a snag and it pissed me off.

The other folks getting my degree were either around where I was gradepoint-wise or they were making a spotless 4.0 because they were god damn geniuses. Seemed like NOBODY out of my group was in the 3.0-3.9 range...

From my experience, GPA is a combination of time invested as well as intelligence. Then it breaks down to professor tendencies and the class itself (higher level classes like 400-level tend to be more forgiving than basic ones). This one dude I went to college with was easily the smartest dude in Saudi Arabia in his graduating high school class (or whatever you call it over there). He *MASTERED* English in two years, enough to where he could detect and deliver his own sarcasm.

The guy waited until the night before doing homework and never cracked a book to study for tests (his roomie made note of this. Both of them were Geop). That guy made a 4.0 every semester with complete and utter ease. College was like a game to him =( There was an older dude (30ish or so) that busted his ass and did almost as well as Ali (the genius). He went to MIT pretty easily, whilst Ali went back to Saudi to work off his contract with Aramco.

It was scary. He could've easily gone to Cal-Tech or MIT without even breaking a sweat. You should've seen him do a Rubik's cube x_x

If I see someone with a 2.0 or so, I'll judge them on the spot. Either smart and lazy, dumb as hell, or dumb and lazy. Once someone breaks the 2.5 mark, I find myself unable to judge. So many profs at A&M were too god damn different. One would give loads of partial for a student who was trying earnestly, whereas the other would take 20 points off in the blink of an eye.

RacinReaver Nov 4, 2007 07:29 PM

No hyphen in Caltech. >_>

Gechmir Nov 4, 2007 08:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GRUN-2 (Post 527118)
No hyphen in Caltech. >_>

Deal with it! =V

BlueMikey Nov 4, 2007 08:07 PM

3.526 as an undergrad, though it probably would have been higher if I didn't work all through college (two jobs my first two years). Had a 3.5 through 3 semesters of grad school, and I currently have NaN in law school.

Identity Crisis Nov 4, 2007 08:11 PM

3.19 here.

Ugh, I try to keep up with my classes, but some of them are excruciatingly difficult to catch up on. For example, my psychology class didn't have any homework assignments or the like, so missing even the slightest detail on a test question put the test-taker in a life-or-death situation. I was lucky to pass that class with a C considering that the questions cover every tiny detail in the course material.

Luckily, the A's in my other classes balance out the C's so far. I'm somewhat satisfied with my GPA.

ambience Nov 4, 2007 08:40 PM

Right now, I have a 2.93 as a sophomore at Georgia Tech. I still have while to go because I just switched majors this semester from Electrical Engineering to Computer Science, so I'm a little behind in a school where most students stay for 5 years to complete a degree.

My goal is to hit the 3.5 mark since I plan on attending grad school. Considering the fact I'm helping people with higher-level CS classes than the ones I'm in right now, I'm pretty certain that my issue up to now has simply been a lack of interest in my previous major. If this semester goes well enough, I'll break the 3.0 barrier by this Spring and be well on my way.

Funnily enough, 3.0 at Tech is Dean's List. While I don't believe it's really warranted, it's really nice to say you hit Dean's List for a semester to people who don't know any better. I guess it also acts as an indicator of the difficulty the school is known for.

As far as GPA being an indicator of intelligence goes, I think several factors come into play such as the interest level in a topic, the luck of the draw when choosing a professor, and a student's work ethic from that point on. I know several people who are forced to take a particular major, or else their parents will pull them out of school entirely. It really saddens me.

Sian Nov 5, 2007 02:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adara (Post 527084)
Maybe this will help you and anyone else needing a hand calculating their GPA: GPA calculator. It should help if they measure "hours" the same over there as over here.

Thanks for that!

It came out as 4.0...but I know i'm not that intelligent and I didn't quite understand the hours part. What's all that about?

Dee Nov 5, 2007 02:51 PM

3.85 at the moment. That's because my first semester I got hit with a C in Intro Statistics (funny... I'm doubling in statistics), so that immediately brought my GPA down to a 3.5ish and every single semester after that is just raising it slowly and painfully. It's tough to see a 2 calculated in the 18 hours you take your first semester.

But I know some people with 4.0s and they just cruise by taking the easiest classes. I think it highly depends on your major and what kind of classes you take. If you're electrical engineering, I can doubt seeing 4.0s across the board.

SuperNova Nov 5, 2007 03:07 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I've had different GPAs at different steps along the way.

First was the Westfield State College (hay sass!) Math degree I have. I finished WSC with a 2.76 GPA. It's low thanks to switching majors, once, kinda twice, and jackass professors that think they wrote the book on the subject and expect you to know just as much as they do because it's so easy for them.

Then I started my pre-professional courses to get into pharmacy school. I nailed that stuff with a 3.85 GPA, stuff including organic chemistry and microbiology.

Now I'm in pharmacy school, and I got scared when they told us "you're not gonna get As, and you probably won't get a ton of Bs either". Right now I got an A, 2 Bs, and 3 Cs (which from what I hear really isn't that bad) for a 2.56 GPA (roughly). Hey, all I need is a 2.2 to stay off academic probation!

Bonus: I did a GPA printout which I put in my attachment.

indutrial Nov 5, 2007 04:55 PM

I was a fucking asshole in college. I entered as a history and lit major in my freshman year and earned a 3.8 during my first year. During my second year, I changed majors to chemistry and swiftly dropped down to an even 3 because the classes were hard as hell. After that I decided "fuck this" and went back into history and lit to bring my GPA back up. This would have been fine but I ended up taking some classes with some really horrible teachers and I failed three courses in one semester (mostly due to attendance, which I never held in high regard). After that I was down to a 2.6 or something and on academic probation. After that I went down to part-time and brought myself back up to a 3.1 or something.

I don't regret a thing because I quickly found out that my degree didn't really fucking matter when I started looking for work. You don't need a degree to fix copying machines or bullshit with assholes on the phone. Plus, all my half-assed school behaviors gave me all kinds of time to become a better musician. I also made the good decision of going to a state school and saving a lot of money that most of my peers are still paying off 5-6 years later.

guru_of_time Nov 5, 2007 05:14 PM

Right now a 4.0, but I'm also only halfway done with my first semester...If I get an A- in history, I'll have a 3.96. Must be summa cum laude (3.9-4.0 by graduation)...must be...

Mucknuggle Nov 6, 2007 07:28 PM

I graduated with my Bachelors of Science from McGill University with a 3.8something. I worked a decent amount, but I probably could have pulled off closer to a 4.0 had I been more focused. I don't really care though, it got me into med school and now everything is Pass/Fail. I love it.

BlueMikey Nov 6, 2007 07:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guru_of_time (Post 527628)
Right now a 4.0, but I'm also only halfway done with my first semester...If I get an A- in history, I'll have a 3.96. Must be summa cum laude (3.9-4.0 by graduation)...must be...

Cumming laudely is better than only cumming laudely summatimes.

ba dum ch

guru_of_time Nov 6, 2007 11:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BlueMikey (Post 528256)
Cumming laudely is better than only cumming laudely summatimes.

ba dum ch

....:erm:

Erisu Kimu Nov 12, 2007 01:12 PM

4.47 overall GPA is what I got here in Canada. It means nothing to me though. The professor was just easy-going and for the first time in my life I was interested in studying a college program. My high school GPA on the other hand is as brutal as getting your tongue stuck on ice. High school lacked subjects of my interest. Fuck it.

LordsSword Nov 12, 2007 03:09 PM

I think a GPA reflects your overall stregnth in a field of study.
Your natural bent takes you in certain directions. This is why I am an art major not math.
Now if youre just lazy there is no hope to show how smart you are.


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