Hi all, just a bit curious about how GPA is calculated in US and Canada. No offence, but it seems to me that my school in Singapore has tougher GPA calculations and I don't know if this would put our students to disadvantage when we apply... I am in top 15% of my cohort, out of 800 engineers, and my GPA is around 3.3, and 3.7 for senior years. My school does not report GPA, all are my own calculations. Something happened to my family and I got 2Ds and 1C for my core subjects in my second year. Bad enough Our workload is about 6 subjects/semester (13 weeks).
According to some online forums, it seems that it is quite common to have top 30% of the cohort to have >3.5 GPA? Discouraging when I see others' profile here, a lot of close to 4 from Canadian Universities I heard from my friend that Georgia Tech is another case for tough GPA, but they are famous so I suppose no problem for them.
Also, does school ranking matter in my case as international? Just wonder what would happen between a 4.0 GPA from a 200th university to a say 3+ from a top 50? Anyone knows if my school Nanyang Tech Singapore is recognized in North America? QS puts us as 36th in engineering worldwide but seems that many don't really know us? mm...
Thanks a lot for your opinions. I could be wrong, please feel free to correct me. I don't mean that higher GPA means easier life, I just like more lenient teachers
According to some online forums, it seems that it is quite common to have top 30% of the cohort to have >3.5 GPA? Discouraging when I see others' profile here, a lot of close to 4 from Canadian Universities I heard from my friend that Georgia Tech is another case for tough GPA, but they are famous so I suppose no problem for them.
Also, does school ranking matter in my case as international? Just wonder what would happen between a 4.0 GPA from a 200th university to a say 3+ from a top 50? Anyone knows if my school Nanyang Tech Singapore is recognized in North America? QS puts us as 36th in engineering worldwide but seems that many don't really know us? mm...
Thanks a lot for your opinions. I could be wrong, please feel free to correct me. I don't mean that higher GPA means easier life, I just like more lenient teachers