A few days ago
Anonymous

Are GPAs cumulative from Undergraduate to post grad?

As in, lets say your undergraduate GPA is 3.5, will taking post graduate courses influence and add up to what was already in the undergrad GPA, or will it be recounted again seperately?

Top 5 Answers
A few days ago
Tickled_off

Favorite Answer

When you move on to graduate school, you’re starting on a new degree. So in the same way that your high school GPA was unaffected by your grades as an undergraduate student, your undergrad GPA should be unaffected by post graduate coursework.
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A few days ago
Anonymous
The GPA leading up to each degree or diploma is a separate entity unto itself. So a person’s grade point average getting their BA might be 3.5. Then she goes to grad school, starts smoking crack, and gets poor grades in every class–all D’s. Her GPA for grad school would be a 2.0, and the much better GPA from undergrad work does not positively influence it.

(I liked using a negative example for a change, but I’m not suggesting you’ll get into trouble in graduate work!)

3

A few days ago
Shariq M
I guess it depends on whether you are doing a regular course a course in continuation of the previous. It varies from university to university as different countries have different rules and various universities follow different policies. Without you naming the particular university/universities it wont be possible to answer this question. Most of the universities keep the under grad and post grad GPA’s separate. My advice is to send an email to the university for further details or look up of their website. Remember, Google can do wonders too!
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4 years ago
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after commencement…”placed up” in many cases if “placed up” is earlier a notice it skill after that distinctive experience or action. “grad” short for “commencement”. different examples comprise placed up worrying tension, this suggests tension after a worrying experience.
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A few days ago
tomhale138
no, you get a degree and start over
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