How to Handle Courses with Quizzes in Your Grade Calculation
Courses with regular quizzes use them as continuous formative assessment. They lower the stakes of any single test but require consistent preparation. The final in quiz-heavy courses is often worth 25-35%. Your quiz average is already reflected in your running grade.
Key rule: Use your overall running grade from the gradebook, not your quiz average alone.
Always use your overall running grade. Your course management system (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle) shows this as your overall or running grade. This number already accounts for all with quizzes in your course. Enter that number - not individual component scores.
Step-by-Step: Calculating Your Grade in Courses with Quizzes
- Find your current overall grade. Log into your course management system and find the running overall grade - not individual assignment grades.
- Find the final exam weight. Check your syllabus (usually in the Grading section) for the exact percentage assigned to the final exam.
- Know your target grade. Check degree requirements, financial aid minimums, and major prerequisites to know what grade actually matters for your situation.
- Run the calculation. Enter all three values and click Calculate.
- Interpret the result. If over 100%, your target is out of reach - lower it or speak with your professor. Under 70%, you have a clear path forward.
Common Mistakes in Courses with Quizzes
| Mistake | What Happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Using a component grade instead of overall grade | Calculator gives wrong result | Use the running overall grade from gradebook |
| Wrong final weight entered | All calculations are off | Read the exact percentage from your syllabus |
| Ignoring professor's drop policy | Current grade looks lower than it is | Use the gradebook's adjusted total if a drop policy applies |
| Not waiting for all grades to be entered | Running grade is incomplete | Wait for all work to be graded before calculating |
Frequently Asked Questions
Use the overall running grade shown in your gradebook - it already accounts for all components including quizzes. Do not manually average individual scores.
If ungraded work will affect your score, use a conservative estimate for your current grade. Assuming best-case scenario can lead to overconfidence.
It is in your syllabus under the grading breakdown section. If it is not clearly listed, email your professor.
Use the same calculator with that deliverable's weight. The math works identically regardless of the final's format.
Yes - if extra credit has pushed your grade above 100%, enter the actual percentage. The calculator handles inflated percentages correctly.
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