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Unread 05-10-2015, 00:56
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"A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

In this post Joe Petito mentions how "Getting an "A" in the class will actually pull down your GPA if you as a student are on the Honors/AP track" and it got me wondering: How systematic of a problem is this? and Who has solved it and how?

In our district, Joe's description is spot-on. Our robotics team is comprised of a wide variety of students, but frequently attracts a handful of the very top students. These are the students taking many AP classes and many technical elective classes, straight A grades, well over 4.0 GPA, involved in leadership positions in other extracurricular activities, etc. When they join robotics, they are earning class credit for it. For some of them, it's three years worth of class credit. And they get straight A grades in robotics too, the highest grade achievable, the highest grade we can award. And yet, it lowers their GPA. Why? Because robotics is not an AP class, and it never will be.

So essentially, in the current system, Students who take MORE classes, and earn the highest grade possible in those additional classes, graduate high school with a LOWER GPA. It seems counter-intuitive, and I'm not convinced it's something the universities have even realized yet. Are we disadvantaging students by giving them more credits than typical, and by giving them an "A" grade in robotics?

While not a single college admissions representative will ever tell you that GPA is used as a primary discriminating factor, in the words of the great Karthik himself, "If they tell you GPA doesn't matter they are lying to your face." When you look at the numbers of applicants versus the numbers of reviewers, you can be fairly confident that GPA is indeed a primary discriminating factor in the application process. Yes there's weighted and unweighted GPAs (along with at least a dozen other ways it's calculated) but the fact that the "A" grade in the additional class actually brings down the weighted GPA concerns me.

We have observed the process for graduates from our own school. Students who take a minimal number of classes, the most of which are AP classes are the ones getting in to the state's top universities, even for degrees like Engineering, even if they have not taken a single engineering class all throughout high school. It's simple math, and they're using it to game the system.

Meanwhile, students who are really the top students in our school, who are on the robotics team, doing far more than the typical high school student, have somewhat lower GPAs simply because they have taken more classes, not because they have lower grades. As a result of the lower GPAs, they are not getting into these top universities.

Who else has this problem? Who has solved it? It seems counter-intuitive to stop awarding course credit for robotics.

I think the Dean's List award and FIRST scholarships are a good initial step toward solving this, but how to we do more to get universities to realize the value of students who participated in FIRST Robotics and other Career Technical Education programs in high school? Do they really want a freshmen class of engineering students who have never turned a wrench?
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Last edited by sanddrag : 05-10-2015 at 00:58.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 01:26
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

You are not alone on this topic, it's a serious problem. GPA and class rank are more of a game than any indication of intelligence or hard work. My class's valedictorian last year took the minimum amount of classes, all of which were AP or honors level, and had a near perfect GPA. This student also never did any elective courses or extra-curricular activities, because their goal was to get the highest GPA.

Many of my other fellow students (including the Salutatorian) who I would deem as better students took more classes (some of them took 8 compared to the valedictorian's 5), but these included non-honors courses such as band, engineering, woodshop/metal shop, art, etc. that kept them from being at the top. This also caused some of them to miss out on their top schools, while their less accomplished classmates with higher GPA's got into their top choices.

So why is this a bad thing? Due to the nature of college applications, GPA is really the only thing that matters. Having just applied last year, I know first hand that there isn't much quantitative information that you send besides your GPA and your test scores. By pushing the GPA game in students faces at the end of every semester, we are pushing students to stray from classes they are passionate about, and instead getting them to take more "core" classes that give them a huge GPA boost. I know lots of my friends didn't explore potential fields of interest in high school because it would hurt there GPA and chances of getting into the schools they wanted.

Another problem this is causing is that lots of kids are taking the honors level courses when they shouldn't be. Pressure from peers and parents to get the highest possible GPA forces them into classes where they struggle, and ultimately fail to actually learn anything in the class as they struggle to simply get by.

The good news? Since I got to college I have a strong feeling that unweighted GPA is used more often than weighted. My reasoning is that talking to my friends from all over the northeast, all of our schools used different systems to weight their advanced classes in regards to GPA, making weighted GPA a bad statistic to quantify and compare. My hope is that colleges know this and use unweighted GPA.

In regards to your question including robotics when it comes to GPA, my school and many others don't even receive credit for our hours put into the team. The amount of time we spend with the team probably hurts our GPA's but in a different way than you are talking about.

As to what we can do to solve the problem: the biggest thing is to stop making kids think that their GPA is all that matters. I know in my high school the only thing our administration told us was to get the best scores and grades possible so we could get into the best colleges out there (and in turn make our school look good.) I hope there is a better solution out there, but I fear that playing the GPA game will only become more common. I hope we can become a society where a passion for excellence and constant learning is the norm.

To any high school students out there reading this, study hard and get good grades no matter what classes you're in. Follow your dreams, explore your interests, and put in the work. When it comes time to apply to college, you'll understand that grades and test scores really are everything, and a lot of colleges may not see FIRST as important as an activity as we do.

Apologies if this seems like a rant, just getting out my frustrations with the system. It's a lot more frustrating when you have to be a part of it.
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Last edited by Jay O'Donnell : 05-10-2015 at 01:28.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 01:34
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

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Originally Posted by Jay O'Donnell View Post
The good news? Since I got to college I have a strong feeling that unweighted GPA is used more often than weighted. My reasoning is that talking to my friends from all over the northeast, all of our schools used different systems to weight their advanced classes in regards to GPA, making weighted GPA a bad statistic to quantify and compare. My hope is that colleges know this and use unweighted GPA.
This is what I've heard oft-repeated - colleges will recalculate your GPA using their own system, to even out differences between the GPA calculations from different schools.

Perhaps this is not always true, and students who take more non-weighted courses really are at a disadvantage. Anecdotally, I know that four years of Jazz Band lowered my weighted GPA (compared to an alternate reality in which I'd taken more Honors/AP classes instead), but I never thought that this somehow put me at a disadvantage in the context of college admissions compared to other students. Perhaps I was just naive.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 01:37
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

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Originally Posted by Jay O'Donnell View Post
The good news? Since I got to college I have a strong feeling that unweighted GPA is used more often than weighted. My reasoning is that talking to my friends from all over the northeast, all of our schools used different systems to weight their advanced classes in regards to GPA, making weighted GPA a bad statistic to quantify and compare. My hope is that colleges know this and use unweighted GPA.
I'm pretty sure that this is true. Less than half of the schools I applied to even asked for unweighted GPA. This is probably because different schools calculate these things differently. I don't have any firsthand knowledge of selection criteria, but I bet most colleges look more at your whole transcript than any numbers that your high school churns out based on your transcript.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 02:16
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

This was a huge concern when Citrus Circuits first put together a class that we offered, the overwhelming student voice was everyone that had AP classes would not take the class because it would lower their GPA. What we have done to partially resolve this is offer our robotics courses to our students as EITHER a A-F graded class or as a Pass/No Pass course. Our students that are AP takers can take it as Pass/No Pass and not have their GPA adversely affected while still getting elective credit. Our students that do not take AP can then still freely take it as a graded course to bring up their GPA.

The underlying issues surrounding AP/Honors courses is not an issue I am qualified to discuss, but I feel that our solution is not a bad one based on the system we have to work with.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 11:17
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

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Originally Posted by RoboChair View Post
This was a huge concern when Citrus Circuits first put together a class that we offered, the overwhelming student voice was everyone that had AP classes would not take the class because it would lower their GPA. What we have done to partially resolve this is offer our robotics courses to our students as EITHER a A-F graded class or as a Pass/No Pass course. Our students that are AP takers can take it as Pass/No Pass and not have their GPA adversely affected while still getting elective credit. Our students that do not take AP can then still freely take it as a graded course to bring up their GPA.

The underlying issues surrounding AP/Honors courses is not an issue I am qualified to discuss, but I feel that our solution is not a bad one based on the system we have to work with.
I'll echo that this has been a great solution for the students on our team. Sanddrag, if this is an option for your program, I would look into it. As Devin said, it allows a wide variety of students to take the class and benefit, no matter what "academic track" they are on.

If you want more info, PM me and I can put you in touch with our Lead Mentor who established our courses at the high school.

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Unread 05-10-2015, 11:34
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

Honestly, I don't think there's much reason to worry about robotics bringing your GPA down closer to 4.0. If you're that concerned that "optional classes" you didn't have to take for graduation lowered your GPA and might affect your ability to get in somewhere, then you have ample opportunity to talk about! Make it a focus of one of your admissions essays (write about how the robotics classes impacted you, and end with a tag line "even though it lowered my GPA, it was well worth it"). When you visit the college and interview with someone there, bring it up in the interview - "i was wondering how my GPA compares to your typical applicant", and as that conversation progresses, "i knew it was going to lower my GPA, but I felt that taking this robotics course would help me because...".

Personally, I never found GPA to be much of an issue when applying to colleges, and I applied to some rather tough ones. The tough ones are all going to look at much more than just GPA, as others have said... And Schools that don't look past the provided GPA probably aren't going to be difficult for someone with a 4.0+ to get into!
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Unread 05-10-2015, 02:33
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

As a current high school senior and an active member of Team 2468, I cannot express my frustration enough about exactly the issue being covered in this thread.
My school is a very competitive high school where being in the top 10% of the school means taking as many AP classes (that means 5-7 per semester) and getting consistent 95+ grades.
As a student who is actively engaged in Band (which is unweighted), Robotics (also unweighted), and taking foreign language classes (first two years unweighted), I am always at constant stress of trying to juggle my time effectively between the ridiculous amount of homework from the AP classes, marching band practices, and robotics meetings to where I was forced into quitting band for my senior year to make sure that I was able to continue being an active member and a leader in the robotics program.
Spending hours on homework after getting home late from a robotics meeting and then waking up at 5:30 for a band practice has yielded me a class ranking that is barely in the top 10% of the class and I cannot express my disgust with this system enough. I pursued my interests through the activities I engaged myself in (which were time consuming and taught me useful life skills) and the result is a punishment for not taking the "easy-APs" that other take to ensure a higher rank for themselves.
I think a clear solution lies in allowing multipliers for only core-classes (English, Math, etc.) and not for elective courses, but having a higher minimum number of credits necessary to graduate, thereby ensuring that all students are only allowed to take a certain number of grade-enhancing classes and evening the playing field a little more, while decreasing the gap created by students who do not taking as many classes overall to benefit their GPA.

Sorry about the rant, but this issue has been a major source of stress for me in the last several years of my life and I really hope future students don't have to go through the same issue I had throughout my high school years.

Wish me luck as I begin applying to colleges! Maybe they'll value my time spent at robotics and band!

Last edited by LCJ : 05-10-2015 at 02:43.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 07:06
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

GPA is completely different from school to school and as a result, I don't think as much stock is put in the literal number outputted by your school as you would expect come college admissions time. If you have nothing but A's and you're clearly taking challenging classes, a college isn't going to look down on you for not taking 400 AP courses.

You'll be okay - remember that lots of students come from 4.0 schools where GPA is unweighted, yet they aren't penalized compared to 5.0, 6.0, 12.0 schools. (I have no idea how the 12.0 school worked)
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Unread 05-10-2015, 07:37
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

Such an intense focus on the "grade" and getting in to college. Roll it forward 4 or 5 or 6 years and you get this problem.
http://www.macleans.ca/education/uni...pr=12707004769

Robotics and the First program are great at helping with the above problem.

Students. Companies hire stem trained people to solve problems in the "real world" not a virtual text book world. Devote some of your time to jobs - internships and gain experience solving problems in a real job setting.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 09:05
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

Our school district has the "pass-fail" (Page 5) option where students can elect within the first few days of a class to take the class such that it does not affect their GPA. It's mostly used by people who want to take AP/Dual Credit classes and are afraid of failing them. The rest of us use it for non-required classes that are not weighted so that they don't kill our GPAs. This only works for classes that aren't required for graduation. For example: I can do this with my elective rocketry class, but not my required art 1 class. The year that we had robotics as a class, I used this option and it helped tremendously.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 20:26
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

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Originally Posted by Gdeaver View Post
Such an intense focus on the "grade" and getting in to college. Roll it forward 4 or 5 or 6 years and you get this problem.
http://www.macleans.ca/education/uni...pr=12707004769

Robotics and the First program are great at helping with the above problem.

Students. Companies hire stem trained people to solve problems in the "real world" not a virtual text book world. Devote some of your time to jobs - internships and gain experience solving problems in a real job setting.
As well as some of the collegiate engineering competitions. See "robotics with your classes applied to the challenge first". I went to a college with a very strong "hands-on" component. 2 projects sophomore year... 1+ junior year... senior design... and I was on one of the engineering competition teams. That team led to one of the quickest "knowledge turnarounds" I've ever done--calculating how much drag force a turnbuckle would likely generate (and thus, the odds of needing more power than available) right after I'd learned drag. Had to ask the prof what the best strategy was for doing drag on odd shapes...
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Unread 05-10-2015, 21:35
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

I would not worry about this. Most universities are looking at the full picture of who the applicants are as people, what makes them tick, what they might contribute to the campus, and whether they would be able to thrive at the school. It is not just a question of who has the highest combination of GPA and SAT/ACT score, and schools do recognize how different weighting systems can effect weighted GPAs.

I would focus your energy on taking classes that interest and challenge you at a level that is manageable to you. Make the most of the opportunities and resources you have available to you.

If you are interested in going into the STEM fields, having hands-on experience like robotics will reflect well on you when you apply to college, scholarships, internships, and careers. Don't worry about it's effect on your weighted GPA.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 21:40
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

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Originally Posted by smurfgirl View Post
I would not worry about this. Most universities are looking at the full picture of who the applicants are as people, what makes them tick, what they might contribute to the campus, and whether they would be able to thrive at the school. It is not just a question of who has the highest combination of GPA and SAT/ACT score, and schools do recognize how different weighting systems can effect weighted GPAs.

I would focus your energy on taking classes that interest and challenge you at a level that is manageable to you. Make the most of the opportunities and resources you have available to you.

If you are interested in going into the STEM fields, having hands-on experience like robotics will reflect well on you when you apply to college, scholarships, internships, and careers. Don't worry about it's effect on your weighted GPA.
I want to believe this, but I find it difficult to do so. There isn't much that I remember from college applications that would allow colleges to collect that information to get to know a student beyond their grades. The essay is just about it, which is painfully short and usually highly edited by English teachers. The only other thing is you can list clubs and sports, but I know plenty of kids who put down clubs on their applications that they only were a part of for one meeting.
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Unread 05-10-2015, 22:04
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Paul Copioli Paul Copioli is offline
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Re: "A" in Robotics = Lower GPA?

For those of you not familiar with the way Texas Colleges work, there is an automatic admission for the top 10% (in most cases) of your class.

I have a high school sophomore in a very competitive high school. They weight pre-AP, AP, and IB classes so even though he has over a 4.0 average he is not within the top 10% due to a faction of students I call the GPA grubbers.

We had a lengthy conversation about it that ended like this:

Me: Do you even want to go to a Texas School?

Him: No.

Me: Well, then focus on the classes you like, take enough AP classes so you can still be on the varsity swim team and test out of a bunch of credits in college.

Him: OK, but what if I don't get into the best school?

Me: Don't worry about it. You have over 20 schools on your list of desirable schools so you will be fine.

Him: OK, sounds good.


His stress level has gone down significantly since that conversation.

Now, for you other Texas students that want to go to a Texas University ... I don't really have much advice for you other than to work hard and learn as much as you can, because that is really what matters in your education if you want to actually be productive in your career.

Paul
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