Schoology Grade Calculator
Enter each Schoology category with its weight percent and the total points earned vs. possible across all assignments in that category.
| Category | Weight (%) | Earned | Possible | Remove |
|---|
Enter each Schoology assignment with earned and possible points. Schoology divides total earned by total possible for the running course grade in Total Points mode.
| Assignment | Earned | Possible | Remove |
|---|
Letter grade reference (standard US 4.0 scale)
| Percentage | Letter Grade | GPA Points |
|---|---|---|
| 93 to 100% | A | 4.0 |
| 90 to 92% | A- | 3.7 |
| 87 to 89% | B+ | 3.3 |
| 83 to 86% | B | 3.0 |
| 80 to 82% | B- | 2.7 |
| 77 to 79% | C+ | 2.3 |
| 73 to 76% | C | 2.0 |
| 70 to 72% | C- | 1.7 |
| 67 to 69% | D+ | 1.3 |
| 63 to 66% | D | 1.0 |
| 60 to 62% | D- | 0.7 |
| Below 60% | F | 0.0 |
How the Schoology Grade Calculator Mirrors the Schoology Gradebook
The Schoology grade calculator above reproduces the arithmetic Schoology runs when it displays a course total on the Grades page. Schoology supports two gradebook configurations per category: Weighted Categories (the K-12 default for most districts) and Total Points (often used for project-based or single-category courses). The Schoology gradebook calculation method is set when the teacher configures the course at the start of a grading period and rarely changes mid-term. Switch the calculator tab above to match how your teacher set up the course, the result will line up with the Schoology Grades page when the category weights, points earned, and points possible reflect what the gradebook actually shows.
Weighted Categories in Schoology: The K-12 Default
Weighted Categories is the default Schoology configuration in most US K-12 districts. The teacher creates categories such as Tests, Quizzes, Homework, Projects, and Participation, then assigns each one a weight percentage that reflects the syllabus. Each category is graded independently: Schoology sums the points earned across every assignment inside the category, divides by the total points possible, and multiplies by 100 to produce a category percentage. The course total is the weighted average of those category percentages. When the weights sum to 100, the math is a direct weighted mean. When they sum to a different total (intentionally or otherwise), Schoology normalizes by dividing the weighted sum by the actual total weight rather than by 100, which preserves the relative weighting the teacher set.
Schoology Weighted Categories Formula
- Category Percentage (%) = (points earned in the category / points possible in the category) x 100
- Category Weight (%) = weight value set in the Schoology gradebook configuration per category
- Schoology stores category percentages at full precision and displays the rolled-up course grade rounded to the hundredth place
Why Some Schoology Categories Use Percent Instead of Total Points
Within a category, Schoology offers two calculation methods: Total Points (the default) and Percent. Total Points sums earned and possible across every assignment in the category, so a 100-point unit test counts five times as heavily as a 20-point quiz inside the same category. Percent averages the individual assignment percentages instead, so the unit test and the quiz contribute equally to the category percentage regardless of point value. Teachers usually pick Total Points for Homework and Classwork categories (where high-point assignments should dominate) and Percent for Tests or Projects categories (where each major assessment should weigh equally regardless of how many points the rubric happened to assign). The Schoology grade calculator above runs the Total Points method per category, which matches the Schoology default for category aggregation. To model the Percent method, enter each assignment as its own category with weight = 1 and the calculator treats them as equal-weight averages.
Total Points Mode: When Schoology Uses One Big Bucket
Some Schoology courses skip weighted categories entirely and run the gradebook as a single Total Points bucket. The teacher does not configure category weights; every assignment goes into one pool and the running grade is the sum of points earned divided by the sum of points possible across all graded work. This setup is common for single-assessment courses (an art portfolio class, a research seminar with one project grade), summer-school remediation modules, and elementary classes where weighting would add unnecessary complexity. Switch the calculator above to Total Points mode and enter each assignment individually. The result matches what the Schoology gradebook displays at the bottom of the Grades page for a non-weighted course.
- Earned Points = sum of scores across every graded assignment counted toward the grade
- Points Possible = sum of point values across the same graded assignments
- Ungraded and exempt assignments are excluded from both the numerator and denominator
Schoology Rounding: Hundredth-Place Display, Unrounded Internal
Schoology rounds grades for display at the hundredth-place level (two decimal places) while running every internal calculation at full precision. A category that resolves mathematically to 87.4567 percent appears on the gradebook as 87.46 percent, but Schoology uses the 87.4567 figure (not 87.46) when multiplying by the category weight to compute the course total. The student-visible course grade is then rounded a final time to two decimals. The Schoology grade calculator above follows the same rule: full precision internally, two-decimal display on the result. A manual recalculation that reads only the visible hundredth-place figures from the Schoology Grades page can drift one or two hundredths from the official course total, which is expected behavior rather than a calculator error.
Common Schoology Grade Category Configurations
Teachers configure Schoology categories differently by subject and grade level. The table below shows common category setups for typical course types, useful when your teacher has not explicitly shared weights or when you want to model a hypothetical grading structure before the syllabus drops.
| Course Type | Category | Typical Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Core Academic (Math, English, Science, History) | Tests / Major Assessments | 40 to 50% |
| Quizzes / Minor Assessments | 25 to 30% | |
| Homework / Practice | 20 to 30% | |
| Lab / Project-Based | Lab Reports / Projects | 50 to 60% |
| Quizzes / Tests | 25 to 30% | |
| Participation / Classwork | 10 to 20% | |
| PE / Electives | Participation / Performance | 50 to 60% |
| Skills Assessments | 25 to 30% | |
| Written Work / Portfolio | 10 to 20% | |
| AP / Honors Core | Tests / Exams | 55 to 65% |
| Homework / Quizzes | 35 to 45% |
Schoology Grade Calculation Modes: Side by Side
Schoology supports two distinct gradebook configurations at the category level: Total Points and Percent. The table below summarizes how each one rolls up a category percentage, which guides the calculator mode you should pick and how to enter data.
| Behavior | Total Points (default) | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| How category percentage is computed | Sum of earned / sum of possible across all assignments in the category | Average of each assignment percentage in the category |
| High-point assignments | Dominate the category percentage | Counted equally regardless of point value |
| Typical use case | Homework, Classwork, mixed-point Quizzes | Tests or Projects where each assessment should weigh equally |
| Effect of one low score | Proportional to that assignment point value | Equal to the inverse of the number of assignments |
| Calculator mode that matches | Weighted Categories with category total earned / total possible | Enter each assignment as its own weight=1 row |
Schoology vs. Other LMS Gradebook Calculators
Schoology is one of several learning management systems used by K-12 and higher education institutions. Each LMS handles grade categories and weighting similarly in concept but differs in interface, default configuration, and SIS integration depth. The comparison below covers the gradebook differences that matter when reconstructing a course total.
| Feature | Schoology | Canvas | D2L Brightspace | Blackboard | PowerSchool SIS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted categories | Yes (default) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Total Points mode | Yes (alt) | Yes | Yes (Points system) | Yes | Yes |
| Per-category calc method | Total Points or Percent | Points only inside group | Formula or Weighted | Points only inside group | Percent or Points |
| Display rounding | Hundredth place | Hundredth place | Configurable | Tenth place default | Hundredth place |
| Primary market | K-12 (60% of US districts) | Higher Ed | Higher Ed + K-12 | Higher Ed | K-12 SIS |
| Student grade view | Category + assignment | Category + assignment | Category + assignment | Category + assignment | Course final only |
| SIS integration depth | Native (PowerSchool group) | Banner, PeopleSoft, custom | Banner, PowerSchool | Ellucian, PeopleSoft | N/A (is the SIS) |
Schoology Grade Calculator vs. the Live Gradebook
The Schoology gradebook displays real-time grades as teachers enter scores. Students sometimes need to estimate a grade before final assignments are scored, calculate the score needed on an upcoming test to reach a target, or model how a missing assignment affects standing in the course. This calculator handles those what-if scenarios by accepting any combination of category weights and scores without waiting for the official gradebook to update. The result is the same arithmetic Schoology would run if those projected scores were already entered.
What-If Scenarios for Your Schoology Grade
To run a what-if scenario, enter your current category percentages and weights as they appear in Schoology. Then change the earned-points value in a future category (Test, Final Exam, end-of-term Project) to several target levels and watch the course grade shift. A student sitting at 78 percent in the Tests category might want to know what test score brings that category to 82 percent, or what test score is required to push the course grade from a B+ to an A-. Scenario planning of this kind helps students prioritize which remaining assignments and assessments have the largest impact on the final Schoology grade before the course closes for the term.
Schoology PowerSchool Integration: Where the Grade Becomes the Transcript
Schoology and PowerSchool have shared a parent company since 2019, and the integration between the two products is deeper than any other Schoology SIS connector. Final course grades push from Schoology to PowerSchool at the end of each grading period, and PowerSchool then computes the cumulative GPA, class rank, and transcript. Schoology district administrators can choose how exact the sync runs: percentage-only, letter-only, both percentage and letter, or a custom mapping where Schoology percentages flow into PowerSchool with a district-defined grading scale on top. When a Schoology grade disagrees with the PowerSchool transcript, the sync has either not run yet (typical lag is end-of-term) or the district has configured a non-standard mapping that the district technology team can document.
Schoology with Infinite Campus, Skyward, and Other SIS Platforms
Districts that run Schoology without PowerSchool typically pair it with Infinite Campus, Skyward, or Aeries as the system of record for cumulative GPA and transcripts. The Schoology connector for these platforms covers roster sync (SIS to Schoology) and final-grade export (Schoology to SIS), but does not push category-level or assignment-level grades. The official cumulative GPA always lives in the SIS, never in Schoology itself. Students checking a GPA in the district portal are reading the SIS view; the Schoology Grades page only shows the per-course grades that fed into that calculation. The Schoology grade calculator above models the per-course figure cleanly, then pair it with our GPA calculator to produce the cumulative figure across courses.
How Schoology Handles Exempt, Missing, and Late Assignments
Schoology offers three special flags that affect how an assignment counts toward the running grade. Exempt removes the assignment from both the numerator and denominator of the category calculation, useful for students with accommodations or for assignments dropped by the teacher. Missing treats an ungraded past-due assignment as either zero (the harsher default in many districts) or as still-ungraded (excluded from the calculation entirely); the choice is per-category. Incomplete works like Missing but signals that the work is in progress. Late lets the teacher apply a manual or rule-based deduction (often 10 percent per day late) before the assignment counts. The Schoology grade calculator above does not model flags directly. Instead, enter the post-flag earned points (after any late deduction) and skip exempt assignments to reproduce the running figure Schoology displays.
Tips for Using the Schoology Grade Calculator Effectively
- Check the gradebook mode first. Open the Schoology Grades page and look for category headers with weights. Weights present means Weighted Categories mode; no category bands means Total Points mode.
- Enter category totals, not individual assignments, in Weighted mode. The category earned and possible figures already aggregate every assignment in that category. Entering one row per category keeps the calculator math identical to the Schoology rollup.
- Match the rounding convention. Schoology uses unrounded internal values and displays two decimals. The calculator follows the same rule, which is why a half-percent gap between the calculator and a hand calculation usually comes from intermediate rounding in the hand version.
- Verify exempt and missing flags before reconciling. A category percentage that does not match the gradebook almost always traces to an exempt or missing assignment that the calculator inputs did not account for.
- Use Total Points mode for single-bucket courses. When the teacher did not configure category weights, the Total Points tab gives the right answer in one calculation.
Sources and Verification
The Schoology grade calculator above implements the gradebook formulas as documented on the Schoology Help Center (support.schoology.com), including the category weight rollup, the Total Points vs. Percent per-category calculation methods, and the hundredth-place display rounding behavior. The Schoology PowerSchool integration and SIS sync behavior comes from PowerSchool product documentation and from the Springfield Public Schools district configuration guide (Springfield Public Schools: Schoology Gradebook Setup), which publishes a real-world implementation of the gradebook category configuration. For the standard US 4.0 letter scale used in the reference table, the conversions follow the College Board grading scale published for AP and CLEP score reports.
Always verify your projected course grade with the Schoology gradebook total and your teacher syllabus. Custom category configurations, late-policy deductions, exempt-assignment rules, and district-level grading scale overrides can shift the final figure, and only the official course total from the teacher gradebook is authoritative for academic decisions. Last verified: 2026-05-26.