Example 1 Example 1 Coursework category weighting: Assignments 70% at 40% and exam 60% at 60% gives a weighted grade of 64%.
Output: Coursework category weighting: Assignments 70% at 40% and exam 60% at 60% gives a weighted grade of 64%.
See what can change your outcome when comparing general weighted grading with UK module credit weighting, and choose the right calculator.
The difference between a weighted grade calculator and a UK weighted module average calculator is the grading system they are designed for and how weights are applied. The Weighted Grade Calculator is a general tool for combining scores using flexible category weights across assignments, exams, or coursework. The UK Weighted Module Average Calculator is tailored to UK degree structures, where modules and credits determine your overall average. Use the weighted grade calculator for general coursework-based systems, use the UK module average calculator when your results are structured by modules and credit weighting, and use both together if you want to compare how different weighting models affect your final outcome.
Use the weighted grade calculator when your course uses assignment or category percentages without a module-credit system. Use the UK weighted module average calculator when your grades are organised by modules with credit values. If you apply the wrong model, your final result may not reflect how your institution calculates outcomes.
Choose the calculator that matches your grading structure before interpreting the result.
Use UK Weighted Module Average Calculator Use Weighted Grade Calculator
UK module average calculations depend on module credit values, not only assessment category weights. A 30-credit module normally has more influence than a 15-credit module, even if the percentage marks look similar. Use the general weighted grade calculator for assignment or category weighting, and use the UK weighted module average calculator when your result depends on module credits, degree structure, or classification rules.
| Dimension | Weighted Grade Calculator | UK Weighted Module Average Calculator |
|---|---|---|
| Primary use | Compute your overall score from category weights and scores. | Calculate weighted module average from marks and credits. |
| URL | weighted-grade | uk-weighted-module-average |
Use Weighted Grade Calculator when your available grades match that calculator's inputs and result type.
Use UK Weighted Module Average Calculator when the question is better expressed through its assumptions and policy context.
For high-stakes decisions, document the assumptions behind both outputs before choosing the result to rely on.
Output: Coursework category weighting: Assignments 70% at 40% and exam 60% at 60% gives a weighted grade of 64%.
Output: UK credit-weighted modules: A 30-credit module at 68% and a 15-credit module at 74% gives a credit-weighted average of 70%.
Output: Equal marks, different credits: A 60% mark in a 30-credit module affects the average more than a 75% mark in a 15-credit module.
Output: Wrong model used: Treating four modules equally gives 68%, while credit weighting gives 65%.
Output: Classification boundary: A credit-weighted average of 69.5% may sit near a First-class boundary depending on policy.
Output: General course without modules: A course with exam 50% and coursework 50% is better handled by weighted grade.
Weighted Grade Calculator hub | UK Weighted Module Average Calculator hub
Weighted grade combines category scores, while UK module average combines module marks using credit weighting.
Use it when your course uses assessment or category percentages rather than module credits.
Use it when your marks are organised by UK modules with credit values.
Yes, because category weighting and module credit weighting can apply different structures.
Higher-credit modules usually have more impact on the final module average.
Only if you enter module credits as weights and understand the grading policy.
Avoid treating all UK modules equally when their credit values differ.
The UK weighted module average calculator is better when degree modules and credits determine the result.
It can contribute to classification, but institutional rules may also apply.
Check the official policy before relying on a calculated average.
Yes, a high-credit module can change the final average more than a low-credit module.
Decide whether your result should be calculated by assessment categories or UK module credits.