Your high school GPA is the #1 academic factor in college admissions. Whether you're applying to highly selective colleges or aiming to qualify for scholarships like the Alaska Performance Scholarship, understanding how GPA works—and how to improve it—is crucial.
In this post, we’ll explain four essential GPA facts that every college-bound student should know. Then, we’ll show you how to use our free GPA Scenario Calculators Kit to predict your future GPA and set realistic academic goals.
Our GPA Scenario Calculators allow you to test how achieving certain levels of academic performance (e.g., all A’s, mostly A’s, mostly B’s, etc.) will impact your cumulative GPA by the end of your junior year or senior year. But before you download the GPA Scenario Calculators to play around with your specific numbers, take a moment to familiarize yourself with four important principles about your high school GPA that are generalizable to all college-bound students.
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Your early grades carry more weight than most students realize. The more semesters you complete, the more credits are locked in—and the harder it becomes to move the needle on your cumulative GPA.
Example: If you start improving in spring of 9th grade, you’ll have more time and credits to boost your GPA. But wait until junior year, and your improvements won’t have the same impact. If Johnny, a student with a 3.25 cumulative GPA, begins to maintain a 3.75 GPA starting in the spring of his freshman year, he can achieve a 3.67 cumulative GPA by the end of his junior year.
However, if Johnny waits until the fall of his junior year to begin improving his grades, he will achieve only a 3.42 cumulative GPA by the end of his junior year.
While an unwanted grade in a single course may not impact your GPA substantially, grades below your average in just handful of classes can derail your GPA quickly—even late in your high school career. For example, if our friend Johnny goes into his junior year with a cumulative GPA of 3.75 and maintains a GPA of 3.00 (B’s) during those two semesters, his cumulative GPA by the end of junior year will decline to 3.50.
Generally, admissions committees give your most recent grades more weight in their evaluation. Accordingly, even if you can’t improve your cumulative GPA all the way to the median for the colleges you’re interested in by the end of your junior year, it’s still worth demonstrating your strongest possible performance between now and when you submit applications. Conversely, if you’ve maintained a strong GPA so far, don’t let your performance slide now, because the reverse is also true—colleges look unfavorably on a recent decline in your overall level of performance.
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Not sure what GPA you should aim for? Download The Frontier 49 College Admissions Factbook for free to find out what GPA will make you competitive at the colleges and scholarships you’re interested in. |
Especially if you plan to apply early decision or early action, many colleges have application deadlines in November or early December—meaning they won’t see your senior year grades until after they make their admissions decision. For that reason, you should plan to maximize your cumulative GPA as of the end of your junior year to make the best impression. But, read on with Fact #4B:
Of course, it’s also important to maintain equal or better academic performance throughout your senior year. Here are three reasons to avoid falling victim to senioritis:
Ready to see what this means for you? Grab your transcript (or log into your student portal), and let’s run the numbers.
Now that you have some general insight on how GPA dynamics work and how they play into your college admissions profile, download our GPA Scenario Calculators Kit to see how your own numbers play out. The Kit includes three tools to give you actionable insight in your college admissions planning:
Want to know start analyzing your GPA?
Download our free GPA Scenario Calculators Kit to map out your GPA under different grade scenarios—including AP/IB weighting.
👉 Download The Calculator!