Which GPA Should I Include on My Grad School Application?

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When applying to graduate schools, the recommended approach for reporting GPA is to use the GPA from the university where the applicant is graduating, as it aligns with the primary transcript. This avoids discrepancies and simplifies the application process. While it's possible to mention the GPA that includes transferred classes, it is not necessary, especially since the graduate school will receive both transcripts and can calculate the GPA themselves. Additionally, grades from over a decade ago are generally considered irrelevant and do not need to be addressed in the personal statement. The focus should remain on the current academic performance and the GPA that accurately reflects the applicant's recent work.
Jack21222
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I am applying to grad schools now, and I have a question on what I should be putting in the space that asks for GPA.

I transferred from a community college, and some of my community college classes go back 11 years. The GPA I'm graduating with from my 4 year university only takes into consideration the classes I took there. They also list on the transcript the classes the transferred over and the grade received there. There are some classes I took at community college that did not transfer at all.

I can make a case for 3 different GPAs.

1) The GPA my university says I'm graduating with (middle)

2) The GPA including all classes that transferred over (highest, by a tiny bit)

3) The GPA including every class I've ever taken in my life (lowest)

Which one should I be entering into these application forms? The grad school will get both transcripts, so they can calculate the GPA however they wish, I'm just curious what I should put in the form.

In a related question, should I bother mentioning the poor grades I received 11 years ago in the personal statement? Or are those grades irrelevant?
 
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Hello,

I believe you would probably want to put the GPA from the school you are graduating from. You can briefly state in your statement of purpose what your GPA would actually be if you included your transfer classes since it seems it will make it a little bit higher but I don't think this would be a necessity. At least this way there is no discrepancy between the GPA on your primary transcript and your GPA from your application.
Also, since your bad grades are from over a decade ago I would say that you don't need to mention them.

Good luck with your applications. I hated doing them when I applied for graduate schools so I know how annoying the whole process can be.
 
I think whatever GPA that isn't contradicting your transcripts. You could say they would be higher with transferred courses that aren't showing up on your transcript, but a committee would have no reason to believe that's true.
 
Pengwuino said:
I think whatever GPA that isn't contradicting your transcripts. You could say they would be higher with transferred courses that aren't showing up on your transcript, but a committee would have no reason to believe that's true.

Well, the transferred courses would show up on the transcript, including grades, they just aren't counted in the GPA calculation on the transcript. It looks like this, at least on my unofficial transcript:

Transfer Credit from COMMUNITY COLLEGE BALTIMORE COUNTY
Applied Toward Bachelor of Science Program
ARAB 101 ARABIC ELEMENTS I 3.00 3.00 A
ASTR 161 GENERAL ASTRONOMY I 4.00 4.00 A

And so on. I'm leaning on not calculating them, and just going by the line at the bottom that says:
Undergraduate Career Totals
CUM GPA : ...

And now that I'm looking at it more closely, I don't think the ones with the transfer credits will be any higher. It might even be slightly lower. That will depend on how I do this semester, though.
 
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