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A Word about Grade Points

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Most universities also have a complicated grade point system in addition to percentage and letter grades. One system involves converting the percentage or letter grade to a 4.0-point scale, as shown in Table 2.1 for the University of Toronto. The GPA ranges used vary between universities, with some calculating grades on 4.33-point, 12-point or other scales.

Since this is of little concern to you at this stage and since the system in Canada varies from university to university, it will not be discussed further. I will make a point about this, however. I’ve never been able to understand the logic of converting a 100% scale to a 4.0 or other scale with 0.3 gradations, as is done in some grade point systems. This homogenizes the marks and distils them to a smaller number, putting students into groups. At the University of Toronto a student who gets 85% is given the same grade as one with 100%, completely destroying the concept of excellence. What’s more, depending on where you fall one percentage point of real marks can be quite significant. A 1% difference can mean either a 0.3 or a 0.4 difference in value (which actually represent 7.5% and 10% differences in grade point value, respectively). Similarly, a student with 80% gets only 0.3 less than a student who gets perfect! This becomes even more ridiculous when different universities then have to recalculate your university’s grade point into their own which further fudges the grade. There are numerous other inequities to the system but I think the point has been made: Canada is on the metric system and all universities should use the full 100% scale because it is fairest to students.


How to Succeed At University--Canadian Edition

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