Weighted Final Exam Planning
Plan for a weighted final exam by using current course grade, target grade, and the final exam percentage from the syllabus.
- Search intent
- Use weighted course grade for final planning.
- Last updated
- 2026-05-26
Use the current weighted grade
Weighted Final Exam Planning starts with the course grade before the final is counted. If the class has weighted categories, use the weighted gradebook value.
Use the related calculator to test the numbers, then check official records before relying on the result.
Final exam weight controls the pressure
A larger final exam weight gives the final more power to raise or lower the course grade.
Use the related calculator to test the numbers, then check official records before relying on the result.
Read unreachable results carefully
A required score above 100% means the target is not reachable on the final alone under the entered numbers.
Use the related calculator to test the numbers, then check official records before relying on the result.
Practical example
If the final is 25% and current weighted grade is 88, a 90 target requires 96.
Planning note
Use the estimate to plan next steps, then verify the official rule in your syllabus, transcript, or school policy.
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FAQ
- Is weighted final exam planning an official rule?
- No. This guide explains planning math only. Use your instructor's published policy for official decisions.
- Which calculator should I use with this guide?
- Use the related calculator that matches the question: GPA, target GPA, cumulative GPA, weighted GPA, grade average, or final grade.
- Why might my official result differ?
- Schools can use different grade points, weighting, repeat rules, rounding, exclusions, and transcript policies.
Disclaimer
GradeTally is an independent planning tool. Use these examples to understand the math, then check your school, instructor, transcript, or evaluator for official rules.