Add a course to see how much it would move your GPA.
Goal mode
Pick a target GPA and how many credit hours you have to work with. We'll tell you the average grade you'd need across those credits.
If the PDF importer can't read your DARS report, copy the chronological
section as text and paste it here. Open the PDF in any reader, find the
Undergraduate Course Record - Chronological section, select
the rows with your courses (e.g.
Fa26 BIOS1030 3.0 C+ HUMAN BIOLOGY I), copy, and paste below.
GradeLever - GPA Balance Visualization
https://www.ohio.edu/scripps-college/mcclure
ITS 2140), optional title, 1 to 6 credit hours, and a letter grade. Each one drops onto the beam as a weight, color-coded by school prefix.Your data stays in this browser (localStorage). Use ☰ → Share → Generate URL to copy a shareable link to your clipboard. The URL bar itself is kept clean so it doesn't look noisy. (Both this window and the Help window are resizable; drag the bottom-right corner.)
GPA is the weighted average of grade points by credit hours:
GPA = Σ(grade_points × credits) / Σ(credits).
On the beam, that's the same formula as the center-of-mass of weights
positioned at their grade values, so the fulcrum literally sits at your GPA.
Top of scale is A = 4.0; bottom is F = 0.0. A+ is not supported (most US schools cap at 4.0).
RG entries go to Planned (defaulted to grade A so they project as A's; you can edit each before committing). CR / W / I / IP / TR / EX / NC / P / NP are skipped (no GPA impact).localStorage automatically. No account, no backend.This Help window and the Getting Started window are resizable: drag the bottom-right corner to make them bigger or smaller.
The line below the beam ("With X credit hours under your belt…") shows the live impact of one more A in a 3-credit course AND a 4-credit course. The more credits you've completed, the smaller those numbers get; that's GPA weight.
Add a course to see how much it would move your GPA.
Pick a target GPA and how many credit hours you have to work with. We'll tell you the average grade you'd need across those credits.