Grading System
The grading system and associated grade points per whole-credit are as follows: 
| A 
 | 4 
 | Excellent 
 | 
| B 
 | 3 
 | Good 
 | 
| C 
 | 2 
 | Satisfactory 
 | 
| D 
 | 1 
 | Poor 
 | 
| F 
 | 0 
 | Failing 
 | 
| CR 
 | 0 
 | Taken for credit only, minimum grade of C 
 | 
| NC 
 | 0 
 | Taken for credit only, maximum grade of D 
 | 
| I 
 | 0 
 | Incomplete 
 | 
| NR 
 | 0 
 | No Report 
 | 
| W 
 | 0 
 | Withdrawn 
 | 
| WE 
 | 0 
 | Withdrawn due to administrative action 
 | 
| AU 
 | 0 
 | Audit 
 | 
At the conclusion of each semester, students receive a grade, a GPA credit, and a degree credit for each course. 
 
A
 GPA credit indicates the weighting factor assigned to a grade for use 
in the GPA computation. A grade of A, B, C, D, F, or NC 
may be assigned a GPA credit of 0, 1/4, 1/2, or 1, depending on the 
course. Most Hendrix courses carry a GPA weight of 1. Study abroad 
credits, however, typically carry a GPA weight of 0, unless Hendrix is 
the originating institution for the grades. For example, Hendrix is the 
originating institution for the Costa Rica study abroad program. Applied physical and musical activity classes typically carry GPA weights of 1/4 or 1/2.
A 
grade of CR, I, NR, W, WE, or AU will always be assigned a GPA credit of
 0. To compute the grade point average, multiply each grade by its 
assigned GPA credit, sum the results, and divide by the sum of the GPA 
credits. A grade of WE will be assigned to indicate that a student was withdrawn due to administrative action, including: academic dismissal, disciplinary 
expulsion, academic suspension, and disciplinary suspension. 
 
A
 degree credit indicates whether or not the received grade will be 
assigned an earned credit towards graduation. A grade of A, B, C, D or 
CR may be assigned a degree credit of 0 or 1, depending on the course. A
 grade of F, NC, I, NR, W, WE, or AU will always be assigned a degree credit of
 0. To compute the number of earned credits, sum the total 
number of degree credits. 
 
Grade I (Incomplete)
The I grade is assigned when, for reasons beyond the control of the student, they are unable to complete requirements of a course by the 
end of the semester. When an I grade is reported by an 
instructor, a form entitled “Report on Incomplete Grade” must be 
submitted by that instructor to the Registrar. This report stipulates 
the conditions and the deadline date that must be met for the removal of
 the Incomplete. Incomplete grades should be resolved by the conclusion 
of the following semester and may not extend beyond a calendar year. 
(The calendar year begins at the end of the semester in which the grade 
of Incomplete is assigned.) The student and the advisor will receive 
copies of this report. Removal of the I and the assigning of 
the course grade by the instructor occur once the student has 
successfully completed the remaining course requirements. The I grade will revert to the grade specified on the Report on Incomplete 
Grade form if the requirements are not met by the specified deadline 
date. Forms submitted without a grade specified will convert to an F after 
the deadline. 
 
Grade NR (No Report)
The NR grade is a 
temporary one and indicates that, due to circumstances beyond the 
control of the student, the Office of the Registrar did not receive the 
grade. Instructors should replace the NR grade by a letter grade (A, B, 
C, D, F, I) for graded courses, or a credit/no credit grade (CR, NC) for
 non-graded courses, as soon as possible, but no later than graduation. 
For courses not expected to have a delayed grade because of an extended 
project or research, if the instructor has not replaced an NR grade by 
the end of the second semester following the initial NR grade, then the 
NR grade will be replaced by an F grade for graded courses and an NC for
 non-graded courses. For courses expected to have a delayed grade 
because of an extended project or research, if the instructor has not 
replaced an NR grade by the end of the second semester following the 
second NR grade, then the NR grade will be replaced by an F grade for 
graded courses and an NC for non-graded courses. In cases where the 
instructor assigns a grade of I, the I policy supersedes the NR policy 
at that point. 
 
Grade AU (Audit)
With the instructor’s 
permission, full-time students, employees, and employees’ dependents may
 audit a course without charge. Audited courses are not included in the 
calculation of course load, nor are they recorded on the permanent 
record. Part-time students or other individuals who are not 
matriculating at the college are required to pay the established fee per
 course. Courses with enrollments limited by space or equipment 
availability such as applied music, studio art, laboratory courses, 
etc., may not be taken as audit.  
 
Repeating a Course
A 
student may repeat a course for which a grade already exists on the 
transcript. When a student repeats a course at Hendrix, the highest 
earned grade factors into their Hendrix GPA, and the 
course receives an R designation. The lower grade, designated with an 
asterisk (*), remains on the Hendrix transcript, but it does not factor 
into the grade point calculation. A repeat grade of CR is only higher 
than previously earned grades of D, F, NC, W, and WE. Repeated courses 
count only once toward earned degree credits. A course transferred in as
 a repeat course cannot replace a grade earned in the original Hendrix 
course.
Courses Taken For Credit Only 
 
To encourage selection 
of a broader range of courses, Hendrix permits students to take one 
course per year on a credit-only basis during their sophomore, junior, 
and senior years. In place of the letter grade of C or better, the 
student will receive the designation of CR. In place of the letter grade
 of D or F, the student will receive the designation of NC. Courses 
taken for credit-only must be at the 200 level or above. Courses taken 
for credit-only at Hendrix must be outside the student’s major or minor.
 Moreover, because of the centrality of the Learning Domain requirements
 to the liberal arts curriculum, these credit-only courses may not be 
used to complete Learning Domain requirements. These credit-only courses
 also may not be used to satisfy Collegiate Center requirements. The 
maximum number of credit-only courses counted toward graduation will be 
three. Intention to take a course under this option must be declared 
within
 the first month of the semester at the Office of the Registrar. A 
student may request that the CR designation be changed to the letter 
grade reported by the instructor if the course is later used to fulfill a
 major, minor, or Learning Domain requirement in existence at the 
beginning of the student’s senior year. Courses typically assigned a 
grade of CR, such as Physical Activity classes, senior seminars, and 
some internships, will not count toward a student’s limit of three 
credit-only courses. This policy also does not apply to graded music 
activity classes.   
 
Activity Course Credits 
 
Course
 credit for graduation may be earned with the completion of a specific 
number of activity courses with a grade of CR or C or higher in a given 
type of activity. Physical activity courses are offered only on a CR 
basis with no assigned grade. Some music activity courses are offered 
only on a CR basis while others are offered either on a CR or on a 
graded basis. Check 
Department of Music for details.
The following combinations of activity course credits are equivalent to one course credit: 
* Any four different physical activity courses 
* Four semesters of TARA A30 Dance Ensemble 
* Four activity courses at the 200-level (ensembles) or 300-level (thirty-minute per week applied music lessons) 
* Two activity courses at the 400-level (sixty-minute per week applied music lessons) 
* One activity course at the 400-level and two at the 200- or 300-level. 
 
Physical
 activity course credits, dance ensemble credits, and music activity 
course credits may NOT be combined for whole course credits. 
 
Grades
 earned in activity courses will appear on the college transcript and 
will count in the student’s grade point average. However, only whole 
credits (accrued as described above) will count toward the 32 course 
graduation requirement. 
 
Any number of individual activity
 courses may be taken by a student; however, there are limitations on 
the number of whole course credits that a student may count toward 
graduation. Only one course credit in the Department of Kinesiology and 
Health Sciences may count toward graduation, only one course credit in 
the Department of Theatre Arts and Dance may count toward graduation, 
and only two course credits in the Department of Music may count toward 
graduation. The exception to this rule is that Music majors may earn up 
to two additional course credits toward graduation from music activity 
courses. 
 
Activity classes are subject to the same registration, add, drop, and withdrawal deadlines as standard semester courses.