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In Oncourse Gradebook, how do categories and weighting affect grade calculation for percentage gradebooks?

The way your gradebook calculates course grades depends on how you have set it up. For more information on setting up the Gradebook, see Using categories and weighted grades in Gradebook. The following examples illustrate how the different choices in Gradebook Setup will affect how students' course grades are calculated.

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Displaying grades as percentages with no categories and no weighting

In this example, the instructor has set up the gradebook with no categories and no weighting.

Gradebook table with percentages and  no categories
Title Grade (%) Item value (Relative weight)
Exam 1 75 1
Final Exam 92 2
Quiz 1 93 0.5
Final Project 83 3
Midterm Project 70 1

The course grade is the sum of all the grades multiplied by their respective relative weights, divided by the sum of the weights.

Course grade: 83.26% [(1*75+2*92+0.5*93+1*70+3*83)/7.5]

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Displaying grades as percentages with simple categories and no weighting

In this example, the instructor has set up the gradebook with simple, unweighted categories.

Gradebook table with percentages and  simple categories
Category Title Grade (%) Item value (Relative weight)
Exams Exam 1 75 1
  Final Exam 92 2
  Quiz 1 93 0.5
Projects Final Project 83 3
  Midterm Project 70 1

As in the example with no categories, the course grade is the sum of all the grades multiplied by their respective relative weights, divided by the sum of the weights.

Course grade: 83.26% [(1*75+2*92+0.5*93+1*70+3*83)/7.5]

With simple categories, the instructor is able to see the student's overall percentage for each category, which is calculated in the same way as the course grade. For example:

Total (Projects): 79.75% [(3*83+1*70)/4]

However, these category percentages do not affect the student's grade for the course.

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Displaying grades as percentages with weighted categories

In this example, the instructor has set up the gradebook with weighted categories.

Gradebook table with weighted categories

Category Exams (70% weight)

Title Grade (%) Item value (Relative weight)
Exam 1 75 1
Final Exam 92 2
Quiz 1 93 0.5

Total (Exams): 87.28% [(1*75+2*92+0.5*93)/3.5]

The total percentage for the category is the sum of the grades multiplied by their respective relative weights, divided by the sum of the weights.

Category Projects (30% weight)

Title Grade (%) Item value (Relative weight)
Final Project 83 3
Midterm Project 70 1

Total (Projects): 79.75% [(3*83+1*70)/4]

Overall course grade (Exams and Projects): 85.02%

Category Weight Contribution to grade
Exams 70 61.1% (70%*87.28%)
Projects 30 23.92% (30%*79.75%)
Total   85.02% (61.1%+23.92%)

In the unweighted scenarios above, the sum of the relative weights for the exams was 3.5, which is about 47% of the overall sum of the relative weights for the course, while the projects were collectively worth 4/7.5, or about 53% of the total grade. With weighted categories, the instructor has set those weights to 70% and 30%, respectively. Since this hypothetical student did better on the exams than on the projects, the course grade is higher than without the category weights.

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This is document axws in domains all, oncoursecl, sakai-all, and sakaiht.
Last modified on September 12, 2011.

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