Re: Sill questions re: GPA, terminology...
Used to be able to figure out GPAs off the top of my head, but as it has been awhile.... Basically a GPA is what it says, an average of your grades. Take your grades (translate letter grades into numbers, such as an A into a 4.0), then find the average by dividing the total sum by the number of classes. One can easily tell if one is doing the thing correctly by taking a recent transcript and doing the math. If your answer matches the GPA listed, you are doing the math correctly.
If the your school bases admission on your GPA of only pre-nursing sequence classes, follow the above but only count the required classes. Should the department go by your overall grade, just average all your grades.
Yes, ADN and ASN, and even AAS (Associate in Applied Science) are all two year programs, but (again, IIRC) the difference is that Associate Science degrees have stronger general education requirements and are transferable to a university, while AAS degrees have a lower general education requirement to better allow students to concentrate on their major. However normally AAS degrees are not transferable to university. AAS degrees are normally geared towards persons seeking to only spend two years in college then enter the workforce (sound familar? *LOL*), but not considering returning for a BS degree in the future.nce (A.A.S.): one-third of the work shall be in the liberal arts and sciences
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