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What is the LSAC GPA?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:12 am
by daminor
Hi- My undergrad GPA is 3.2 and my Graduate GPA is 3.9. I am wondering what my LSAC GPA would be? Will grad school GPA be considered, are the 2 GPA'a averaged? How does this typically work? Thank you!
Re: What is the LSAC GPA?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:19 am
by MrPapagiorgio
Re: What is the LSAC GPA?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:19 am
by FeelTheHeat
daminor wrote:Hi- My undergrad GPA is 3.2 and my Graduate GPA is 3.9. I am wondering what my LSAC GPA would be? Will grad school GPA be considered, are the 2 GPA'a averaged? How does this typically work? Thank you!
Welcome to TLS.
Graduate GPA is not included, unfortunately.
As for your UG GPA, a few things to consider:
Have you earned any A+?
Have you withdrawn from any courses?
Have you repeated any courses?
Answering yes to any of those questions will affect your LSAC GPA in a positive or negative manner. If not, expect it to be about the same.
Re: What is the LSAC GPA?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:21 am
by SoPro
I think he means the LSDAS GPA?
What the LSDAS does is try to provide a standardized GPA scale. It's needed because point values for letter grades vary slightly by school. For example, an A+ at school X may be counted only as a 4 whereas at another school it's a 4.33.
So the LSDAS says that an A+ is worth X points and an A is worth Y points, an A- is worth Q points and so on and so forth (unfortunately I don't know a link which shows the LSDAS GPA scale, but it's out there).
So to answer your question in a more direct way -- no, your GPA's will not be "averaged" per se. Rather, they will be treated cumulatively. This assumes you went to two or more universities or maybe a university and a community college.
As far as I know, grad school and PhD level grades don't count towards your overall GPA, at least to LSDAS.
Re: What is the LSAC GPA?
Posted: Thu Feb 17, 2011 12:31 am
by daminor
Thanks Everyone! I was just wondering since you are asked to submit your graduate transcripts in applications.