Which GPA Matters More for Grad School Admissions?

  • Thread starter Thread starter acme37
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Gpa
AI Thread Summary
Graduate admissions typically consider both overall GPA and major-specific GPA, but the emphasis often leans towards the major GPA, particularly in the last two years of study. Students are reassured that strong performance in major-related courses, such as Physics and Math, can mitigate the impact of lower grades in unrelated subjects, like language courses. It is common for applicants to present both GPAs in their applications, highlighting the major GPA if it is higher. Many graduate programs focus more on the GPA from the junior and senior years, as this reflects the applicant's recent academic performance and commitment to their field of study. Overall, while a cumulative GPA is important, the major GPA and performance in the latter part of the undergraduate program carry more weight in the admissions process.
acme37
Messages
23
Reaction score
0
Which GPA is looked at in graduate admissions - your overall GPA or your GPA for classes within your major. I ask because I have done well in all my Physics and Math classes, but for my "other" courses I take Chinese, which, try as I might, I can get no better than a B in. It's a tough language to start learning from scratch. The first two years are 5 credit classes and this has tended to bring down my overall GPA, so I would hate to be penalized for trying something completely new.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
acme37 said:
Which GPA is looked at in graduate admissions - your overall GPA or your GPA for classes within your major. I ask because I have done well in all my Physics and Math classes, but for my "other" courses I take Chinese, which, try as I might, I can get no better than a B in. It's a tough language to start learning from scratch. The first two years are 5 credit classes and this has tended to bring down my overall GPA, so I would hate to be penalized for trying something completely new.

You simply discuss how you tried something new in your application.

I think that's all you can do, but I doubt you'd really can penalized. Not a lot anyways.
 
Thanks, that's kind of what I figured. Just wanted some reassurance that it wasn't a dumb thing to be doing - considering there are some people in the class who take it only as a GPA booster. I don't usually care about my GPA but I know it is important and a bad GPA certainly won't help.
 
For graduate school, your major-GPA is probably more important than your cumulative-GPA. In your application, present both GPAs...especially if your major-GPA is higher.

In addition, I would think that your junior-senior-major-GPA is more important than your fresh-soph-major-GPA.
 
When I was applying for grad school, they asked for my GPA during my last two years in school. At that point, you are probably mostly in your physics and math classes, so even if you are only getting B's in Chinese, your GPA should be fine. Classes you took your first couple years of school won't even matter.
 
I've been told repeatedly that graduate schools emphasize your major GPA.
 
A relief!

To hear that grad schools only look at last two years of college is such a relief. I was also concerned about my gpa. During my fresh and soph years, I got mostly B+'s, some B's and a few A's for my humanities classes (i.e history, women's studies).
 
laminatedevildoll said:
To hear that grad schools only look at last two years of college is such a relief. I was also concerned about my gpa. During my fresh and soph years, I got mostly B+'s, some B's and a few A's for my humanities classes (i.e history, women's studies).

Well they don't exclusively look at the major classes...
 

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
3K
Replies
12
Views
2K
Replies
9
Views
3K
Replies
26
Views
5K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
406
Replies
7
Views
803
Back
Top