Calculating Your Grade
Go to Quest for all of your assignment scores. I do NOT use BlackBoard!

Please note that Quest does NOT calculate your overall course grade (score) - I do that via my own local files. I DO extract your SCORES (percentages and in some cases, RAW scores) from Quest for each assignment though.


Exam Curves
Please use the following add-on percentage points for each of your exams to get the "official gradebook" score (Quest does NOT do this). DO find your PERCENT score from Quest, then add the following amounts to those scores and you'll have your official gradebook score.
Exam 1 Exam 2 Exam 3 Exam 4 Final
zero +4 +1 zero 9am = +7
10am = +3

Your Overall SCORE for the Course
Homework
(average best 12 of 16)
5 %
Quiz (iclicker)
(see Note 1)
5 %
Exams
(average best 3 of 4)
(see note 2)
60% or 40%
(see Note 3)
FINAL

30% or 50%
(see Note 3)

G R A D E    B R E A K S

(these are the finalized grade breaks)
A

88.50

B

78.50

C

68.50

D

58.50

F

< 58.50

Must EQUAL or CLEAR the number given. I do NOT round your scores to whole numbers - I use 4 significant figures - that's 2 places AFTER the decimal.
Note 1: Your iclicker score SUM will be uploaded to Quest periodically.
Note 2: Remember to add any special add-on points to your scores before you average.
Note 3: IF your Final is higher than your exam average, it will count 50% and your exam average 40%. IF your Final is lower than your exam average, it will count 30% and your exam average 60%.
YOUR FINAL LETTER GRADE
You now KNOW the curves so you can calculate your grade. You must make at least the cut-off score or higher to get the appropriate grade. Yes, some students will miss the cut-off by as little as a tenth of a point. Please read the following about being on the bubble.

On the Bubble - Borderline cases for letter grades
What is "on the bubble"? The bubble is when you have an overall score of 79.33 and the break for getting a "B" in the course is set at 79.50. It simply means that you have NOT met the criteria for a particular letter grade but are very very close - as in a few 1/10ths or even 1/100ths of a point. What's my method for determining bubble cases?
First, I look at your score on the final exam. If you did much better on the final than other work AND it is considerably higher than the grade break you will receive the higher grade. Next, I look at what your score was on the dropped exam. If you completely bombed the dropped exam, you will most likely NOT get the higher grade. If your dropped exam is actually quite close to the average of the other 3 AND your overall score is only a few tenths (as in 2 or 3 tenths, not 2 or 3 whole percentage points) away, you'll probably get the higher grade. And third, I'll look at your homework scores. Did you do all of them? Are the scores in keeping with your exam averages? Did you do ALL the work for the course?

There you have some of the criteria for beating the bubble. The only SURE way to beat the bubble is to NEVER be on it to begin with. Stay on the high side of the grade breaks and you'll never have to worry about these details.