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Summary
A grade calculator determines the minimum score needed on a final exam (or any weighted assessment) to achieve a target overall grade in a course. This is one of the most common academic questions students face: “If I have an 82% going into the final and I want at least a 90%, what do I need to score?” The answer depends on the weight assigned to the final exam in the course syllabus.
How it works
The course grade is a weighted average. The current grade accounts for the non-final portion, and the final exam accounts for the remaining weight. The calculator solves for the unknown final exam grade by rearranging the weighted average equation:
- The current grade covers the coursework weight (e.g., 70% of the final grade).
- The final exam covers the remaining weight (e.g., 30% of the final grade).
- The formula solves for the exam score needed to bring the weighted average up to the target.
If the required score exceeds 100%, the target grade is mathematically impossible to achieve.
The formulas
Where
This is derived from the weighted average equation:
Where
Worked examples
Need a 90% overall with an 85% current grade, final worth 30%
Identify the values
= Known
Apply the formula
= 30.5 / 0.30
Calculate the result
= 101.7%
Result
You need 101.7% on the final -- not achievable with a standard exam. Adjust your target.
Need a B (80%) with a 75% current grade, final worth 40%
Identify the values
= Known
Apply the formula
= 35 / 0.40
Calculate the result
= 87.5%
Result
You need 87.5% on the final to finish with an 80% overall.
Practical uses
- Exam preparation: Know exactly what score to aim for so you can allocate study time accordingly.
- Goal setting: If the required score is unrealistically high (above 100%), you can adjust your target grade to something achievable and reduce stress.
- Grade recovery: See whether a strong final exam performance can compensate for earlier low scores.
Assumptions & limitations
- Single remaining assessment. The formula assumes the final exam is the only graded work remaining. If there are additional assignments, the current grade needs to be recalculated first.
- Accurate current grade required. The current grade must reflect all non-final coursework, properly weighted. If some assignments have not been graded yet, the calculation will be inaccurate.
- Linear weighting assumed. Some courses use non-linear grading policies (e.g., dropping the lowest score, curving, or minimum thresholds). These are not captured by the simple weighted average formula.
- Scores above 100% are flagged as not possible. Some courses offer extra credit that can push scores above 100%, but this calculator treats 100% as the ceiling.