yaaaaaydoink said:GPA = 3 most recent years so 1st year not counted.
WAM= weighted so first year is only worth a quarter of 4th year, matters very little.
my reaction too. thanks for the info guyskokodamonkey said:yaaaaay
Care to reference that? For Engineering the WAM calculation is correct, but GPA can refer to your whole uni degree also. For applications into further study like for graduate LLB or MBBS they take the last 3 years of study, but I think its best for the OP to ask his/her faculty as it varies.doink said:GPA = 3 most recent years so 1st year not counted.
WAM= weighted so first year is only worth a quarter of 4th year, matters very little.
sounds good budd =)doink said:GPA = 3 most recent years so 1st year not counted.
WAM= weighted so first year is only worth a quarter of 4th year, matters very little.
wrong. where on earth did you find that for GPA. even your WAM definition is incorrectdoink said:GPA = 3 most recent years so 1st year not counted.
WAM= weighted so first year is only worth a quarter of 4th year, matters very little.
SCIWAM I'd reckon.goony said:wow i never knew about the wam vs sciwam thing.
So only engineering and science do calculations with sciwam? Let's say you blitz first and second year subjects and don't do so well with the later years. Your WAM ends out to be in the distinction rang but your SCIWAM ends up being in the credit range.
If an employer asks for marks or what your average is, which one do you use? Are they expecting it based on a SCIWAM, GPA or WAM?
oh yeah and on another note, how would you go about counting GPA if your faculty doesn't use it? Is it out of 7 or 6, is a fail worth 2-3 or zero? etc.
The weighted average mark
A WAM may be calculated for students who have attempted senior units of study. The WAM for students in the Faculty of Arts is the average mark per unit of study of all senior units attempted. Results of W (Withdrawn) and DNF (Discontinued – not to count as failure) are ignored in the WAM calculation.