widerangeinput
Hi all,
Is it true that Said requires a minimum GPA of 3.5/4.0? I am an international applicant to-be with a sub 3.5 GPA and am really curious if this is true. Said is one of my top picks and I would be pretty sorry if that's indeed the case. many thanks in advance-
edit:
Quote:
"Requirements
To apply for the Oxford MBA, you should have:
1. A good undergraduate degree or equivalent
As guidance, a 2.1 degree (GPA 3.5 or its equivalent). Applicants who do not hold such a qualification may be considered if they have a very strong employment record demonstrating a high degree of responsibility."
OK. This clearly brings the deal out. However, still, ever heard of a case like this- where someone with <3.5 getting in?
Or (specifically for those of you who had already got in) what do you understand from this "very strong employment record"?
Honestly, I don't understand this sort of GPA discrimination
It's all relative (I hope!).
See this link:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_un ... sificationA degree may be awarded with or without honours, with the class of an honours degree based on the average mark of the assessed work a candidate has completed. Below is a list of the possible classifications with common abbreviations.
First-class Honours (1st)
Second-class Honours, upper division (2:1)
Second-class Honours, lower division (2:2)
Third-class Honours (3rd)
Ordinary-Degree (Pass) (source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_un ... sification)
In Australia:- 1st Class Honours Degree (well, in Engineering at least), requires a 75% average, or, an approx 3.2 GPA (this will generally get you top 5% of ur graduating class in an Engineering Degree). It seems counter-intuitive (a 75% should be a 3.5GPA), but I had 12 HDs, 8 Ds, 8Cs, and 1P with an avg of 79.4%, a GPA of 3.37 - and finished with very "comfortable" First Class Honours. The majority of my C's were above 70%, with 2 of them being 74% (JUST missing out on a D). Before you freak out - see below for what HD, D, C and P mean! The split is not even between graduations either (there is a 0.5 point gap between HD & D, while there is a 1 point gap between D & C).
- 2:1 requires a 70% average, while 2:2 requires a 65% average. TECHNICALLY speaking, someone with a 70% avg could have an identical GPA to someone with a 65% avg, because marks between 65% - 74% net you a "2.5" on the GPA scale.
- There are no 3rd-class honours in Australia, with an avg of 64% or less being a "Pass" degree.
GPA Scales (Australia):
>85%: 4.0 (High Distinction)
>75%: 3.5 (Distinction)
>65%: 2.5 (Credit)
>50%: 1.5 (Pass)
<50%: 0.5
You can see the contrast between AUS and US, where a 75% in Australia is quite an achievement, whereas 75% in the US is quite average. This is because the passing mark is 50%, and there is no "scaling" or "bell curves" at Australian Universities. Your mark is your mark.
Maybe I'm just trying to convince myself here....I finished 2nd in a class of 90 Civil Engineers with a 79.41% Avg (3.37 GPA), the GPA looks bad (obviously, it is less than 3.5, but my degree is higher than 2:1) - but I excelled during my BE. The people at Said admissions aren't that closed-minded / pig-headed, and they will understand different methodologies for different countries. So if you happen to be an Aussie, having a GPA of about 2.8 is the equivalent of a 2:1 degree.