How do universities calculate course withdrawls in a gpa?

platinumike

Platinum Member
Nov 18, 2004
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Im trying to calculate my gpa as how Univerisities(UF) in particular calculates it. Im just counting each course withdrawl as an F and 0 zero points added to the gpa. Is that how they do it or do they count it as a D or sometghing else?
 

platinumike

Platinum Member
Nov 18, 2004
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here is the text off their site:
"COMPLETE PREPROFESSIONAL COURSES WITH A 3.00 GPA.
(CALCULATED USING ALL ATTEMPTS OF PREPROFESSIONAL
COURSES AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNTIL GRADE OF C
OR BETTER IS EARNED FOR EACH REQUIREMENT. "
 

dude8604

Platinum Member
Oct 3, 2001
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Originally posted by: platinumike
here is the text off their site:
"COMPLETE PREPROFESSIONAL COURSES WITH A 3.00 GPA.
(CALCULATED USING ALL ATTEMPTS OF PREPROFESSIONAL
COURSES AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNTIL GRADE OF C
OR BETTER IS EARNED FOR EACH REQUIREMENT. "

A withdrawal usually doesn't count as an attempt at the course.
 

platinumike

Platinum Member
Nov 18, 2004
2,114
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Originally posted by: dude8604
Originally posted by: platinumike
here is the text off their site:
"COMPLETE PREPROFESSIONAL COURSES WITH A 3.00 GPA.
(CALCULATED USING ALL ATTEMPTS OF PREPROFESSIONAL
COURSES AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNTIL GRADE OF C
OR BETTER IS EARNED FOR EACH REQUIREMENT. "

A withdrawal usually doesn't count as an attempt at the course.


hmm. You see i would call them, but I just got off the phone with the guy and dont really wanna call back right away.
 

Scarpozzi

Lifer
Jun 13, 2000
26,392
1,780
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Originally posted by: platinumike
Originally posted by: dude8604
Originally posted by: platinumike
here is the text off their site:
"COMPLETE PREPROFESSIONAL COURSES WITH A 3.00 GPA.
(CALCULATED USING ALL ATTEMPTS OF PREPROFESSIONAL
COURSES AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNTIL GRADE OF C
OR BETTER IS EARNED FOR EACH REQUIREMENT. "

A withdrawal usually doesn't count as an attempt at the course.


hmm. You see i would call them, but I just got off the phone with the guy and dont really wanna call back right away.
W's usually don't count toward your GPA...you probably talked to an idiot.

 

kmrivers

Golden Member
Oct 22, 2004
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W's don't count. You just withdrew. From what I have heard an excessive amount of withdrawls can look bad. But they don't hurt your GPA.
 

Mo0o

Lifer
Jul 31, 2001
24,227
3
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My school has a deadline for withdrawing. Before then you get a W/P or W/F depending on whehter you're failing or passing when you withdrew. You can't withdraw after the date. You get whatever grade you're stuck with
 

Pacemaker

Golden Member
Jul 13, 2001
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The college I went to had three withdraws, WX which was as if you never took the class, you had to drop the class before the halfway point to get that. Then there was WF and WP which is Withdrawn Passing and Withdrawn Failing. You can only get those if something serious happened like a death in the family or a serious injury. However, none are counted against your GPA and as far as I know they are informational only on the transcript.
 

Whisper

Diamond Member
Feb 25, 2000
5,394
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The way it worked at the universities to which I went would be that if you withdrew during drop/add or the first week or two of classes, it'd drop off your record completely. If you withdrew after that, you'd generally get a W. If you withdrew after the midpoint of the semester, I believe you'd get a WF, which basically factors in as failing. Withdrawals in generally weren't counted in calculating your GPA, though (unless, as just mentioned, it was a WF).

If you had an emergency, you could withdraw with an I (incomplete) pending approval by the school/professor, and then work at making up what you missed the next semester.
 

Matthias99

Diamond Member
Oct 7, 2003
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At my school (Brown), there was a cutoff where you could drop a class (about a third of the way through the semester). Before that date, if you dropped the class it simply didn't exist on your external transcripts (although it shows as a "withdraw" if you get an internal list of all the courses you took.)

The school also didn't calculate GPAs on its transcripts, since you could take many classes with pass/fail grading (and some classes had mandatory pass/fail grading). But on the official transcripts (the sealed ones you could get to give to employers, etc.), classes you dropped before the deadline just didn't show up.

There is no 'real' standard for calculating how withdrawn classes would affect your GPA. I imagine that at most schools, as long as you drop relatively early it has no impact. And keep in mind that potential employers could have their own unofficial calculations (e.g. only looking at certain classes, weighing some things more than others, etc.)
 

sciencewhiz

Diamond Member
Jun 30, 2000
5,885
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Originally posted by: platinumike
here is the text off their site:
"COMPLETE PREPROFESSIONAL COURSES WITH A 3.00 GPA.
(CALCULATED USING ALL ATTEMPTS OF PREPROFESSIONAL
COURSES AND THEIR EQUIVALENTS UNTIL GRADE OF C
OR BETTER IS EARNED FOR EACH REQUIREMENT. "

That sounds like if you took the course 3 times, F once, D once, and C once, they would count all three grades.