A report card refers to the final document that contains an assessment of the student’s academic performance and behaviors. A report card, also called a progress report, is periodically sent to parents or guardians. It contains comments on how the students can improve and as mentioned, the performance matrics.
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Report cards generally contain grading of the subjects obtained by a student, comments about the behaviour and performance in class, and an attendance record.
For parents, the report card is often considered an opinion of the school or teachers about their children.
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There are two types of grading scale on a report card — GPA (Grade Point Average) and percentage. GPA is a standard calculation of a student’s average grades, and it is calculated by dividing the total points achieved by students in academics by the total number of classes. In the traditional method, GPA is assigned a number from 0 to 4, called an unweighted GPA. While in weighted GPA, the number scale is replaced by letter grades A-F, where A indicates excellent, B as good, C is average, D is poor, and F as fail. GPA scale carries from school to school and country to country. Some countries like India have a percentage grading system in schools.
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