Grade Calculator
Calculate your weighted course grade from assignments, tests, quizzes, and exams. Plus: find out exactly what you need on the final to reach your target grade.
Course Grade Calculator
Enter each grade category, its weight (must total 100%), and your score.
What Do I Need on the Final?
Your Course Grade
Category Breakdown
| Category | Weight | Score | Contribution |
|---|
How Weighted Grades Work
Most college courses use weighted grading, where different types of work count for different portions of your final grade. A typical structure might weight homework at 20%, quizzes at 15%, a midterm at 25%, and a final exam at 40%. Your weighted grade is calculated by multiplying each category score by its weight and summing the results.
Weighted Grade Formula
Weighted Grade = Σ (Score × Weight / 100)
Example: HW 92% (20%) + Quiz 85% (15%) + Midterm 78% (25%)
= (92 × 0.20) + (85 × 0.15) + (78 × 0.25)
= 18.4 + 12.75 + 19.5 = 50.65 out of 60 (84.4% of accounted weight)
The "What Do I Need on the Final?" Formula
This is the most common question students ask. The formula inverts the weighted grade equation: Needed Score = (Target Grade − Current Grade × (1 − Final Weight)) / Final Weight. For example, if your current grade is 85%, the final is worth 40%, and you want a 90%: Needed = (90 − 85 × 0.60) / 0.40 = (90 − 51) / 0.40 = 97.5%.
Common Course Weighting Structures
| Course Type | Homework | Quizzes | Midterm(s) | Final | Participation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lecture (heavy final) | 10% | 10% | 30% | 40% | 10% |
| Lecture (balanced) | 20% | 15% | 25% | 30% | 10% |
| Lab Science | 15% | 10% | 20% | 25% | 30% (lab) |
| Writing/Humanities | 30% (papers) | — | 20% | 25% | 25% |
| Math/Engineering | 25% | 15% | 30% | 30% | — |
Study Effectiveness: What Research Shows
A 2013 meta-analysis by Dunlosky et al. in Psychological Science in the Public Interest evaluated 10 common study techniques. The two rated "high utility" were practice testing (taking practice exams) and distributed practice (spreading study over multiple sessions). Re-reading and highlighting — the most popular student strategies — were rated "low utility." Students who replaced highlighting with practice testing improved exam scores by an average of 0.5–1.0 letter grades.
The spacing effect means studying 1 hour per day for 5 days produces better retention than studying 5 hours in one session, even though total time is identical. Research from the University of California found that students who used spaced repetition retained 50% more material after 30 days compared to massed study (cramming).
Physical wellbeing directly impacts academic performance. A 2019 study in Sleep Health found that students sleeping fewer than 6 hours scored 0.5 GPA points lower than those sleeping 7-9 hours. Use our Sleep Calculator to optimize sleep timing. Adequate nutrition, hydration, and regular exercise (Calories Burned) also correlate with higher grades.
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