Infinite Campus Weighted vs Total Points Grading

Not sure whether your Infinite Campus class uses weighted vs total points grading? This side-by-side comparison explains both methods, shows how the same scores can produce different grades, and helps you figure out which system your teacher is using.

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What Are the Two Methods?

Infinite Campus offers teachers several Grade Calc Options, but the two most common are Weighted Categories and Total Points. Understanding the difference between infinite campus weighted vs total points grading is the first step to knowing exactly how your grade is calculated — and how to raise it.

Weighted Categories

Each category (Tests, Quizzes, Homework) carries a percentage weight. A 10-point homework and a 100-point test can belong to categories with very different impacts on your grade.

Further Reading & Tools

Calculate Your Grades: Use our Weighted Grade Calculator and Total Points Calculator to see where you stand.

Related Guides: Deepen your understanding with the How IC Calculates Grades and IC Grading Scale Explained.

Further Reading & Tools

Calculate Your Grades: Use our Weighted Grade Calculator and Total Points Calculator to see where you stand.

Related Guides: Deepen your understanding with the How IC Calculates Grades and IC Grading Scale Explained.

Total Points

Every point earned is added together and divided by every point possible. No categories, no weights — a 100-point test naturally counts more than a 10-point quiz.

Side-by-Side Comparison Table

Here is a quick-reference comparison of weighted vs total points grading in Infinite Campus:

Feature Weighted Categories Total Points
Formula S (Cat% × Weight) ÷ S Weights Total Earned ÷ Total Possible
Uses categories? Yes — each category has a % weight Optional — categories are cosmetic only
Point value impact Within a category, higher-point items matter more; across categories, weight determines impact Higher-point assignments always carry more weight
Empty-category handling Weight redistributed to active categories N/A — no weights to redistribute
Common in Middle & high school Elementary & college-style courses
Transparency Weights visible in IC portal What you see (points) is what you get
Best calculator Weighted Grade Calculator Total Points Calculator

How Weighted Categories Work in Infinite Campus

In weighted grading, your teacher assigns a percentage weight to each category. The weights must total 100%. Infinite Campus calculates your grade by finding the earned percentage within each category, multiplying by the category weight, and summing the results.

Weighted Grade = S (Category % Earned × Category Weight) ÷ S (Active Weights)

Example setup: Tests = 50%, Quizzes = 30%, Homework = 20%

Weighted Example

Category Weight Earned Possible Category %
Tests 50% 160 200 80.0%
Quizzes 30% 135 150 90.0%
Homework 20% 95 100 95.0%

Calculation:

= (0.80 × 50) + (0.90 × 30) + (0.95 × 20)

= 40.0 + 27.0 + 19.0

= 86.0 ÷ 100 = 86.0% ? B

How Total Points Work in Infinite Campus

Total points grading is the simplest approach. Infinite Campus adds up every point you've earned across all assignments and divides by the total points possible. Categories may still appear in the gradebook for organization, but they have no mathematical effect on your grade.

Total Points Grade = All Points Earned ÷ All Points Possible × 100

Using the same scores: (160 + 135 + 95) ÷ (200 + 150 + 100) = 390 ÷ 450 = 86.67%

Key Insight

Notice how the same exact scores produce 86.0% under weighted grading but 86.67% under total points. That 0.67% difference could be the gap between a B and a B+. The grading method your teacher chooses genuinely matters.

Same Scores, Different Grades — A Deeper Look

The difference between weighted vs total points grading becomes even more dramatic when category performance is uneven. Consider a student who aces homework but struggles on tests:

Category Weight Earned Possible %
Tests 60% 140 200 70.0%
Homework 40% 190 200 95.0%

Weighted Result

(0.70 × 60) + (0.95 × 40) = 42 + 38 = 80.0%

80.0% ? B-

Tests dominate because they carry 60% weight.

Total Points Result

(140 + 190) ÷ (200 + 200) = 330 ÷ 400 = 82.5%

82.5% ? B

Both categories have equal total points, so performance is averaged evenly.

Under weighted grading, this student earns a B-. Under total points, the identical scores yield a B — a full grade step higher. The takeaway: if your weak area is in a heavily weighted category, weighted grading amplifies the damage.

Pros & Cons of Each Grading Method

Weighted Categories

? Pros

  • Teachers can emphasize mastery (tests) over practice (homework)
  • Prevents students from "point farming" on low-stakes assignments
  • Better reflects understanding of core material
  • Aligns with college-prep expectations

? Cons

  • Empty-category weight redistribution can be confusing
  • One bad test can tank your grade disproportionately
  • Harder for students and parents to calculate manually
  • Homework effort may feel undervalued

Total Points

? Pros

  • Simple and transparent — just add up points
  • Every assignment's contribution is clear from its point value
  • No confusing weight redistribution
  • Easy for students and parents to verify

? Cons

  • High-point assignments dominate regardless of type
  • Lots of small homework can dilute test performance
  • Teachers have less control over category emphasis
  • Grade can be inflated by easy high-point assignments

How to Tell Which Method Your Class Uses

Not sure whether your teacher chose weighted or total points? Here's how to check in the Infinite Campus student portal:

1. Look for Category Weights

Open your class gradebook in IC. If you see percentages next to category names (e.g., "Tests — 40%"), your class uses weighted categories.

2. Check the Syllabus

Most teachers list their grading policy in the course syllabus. Look for phrases like "weighted categories," "category weights," or "total points grading."

3. Do a Quick Math Check

Add up all your earned points and divide by total possible. If the result matches your IC grade, it's total points. If it doesn't, your teacher is using weighted categories or another method.

4. Ask Your Teacher

When in doubt, ask! Teachers can confirm exactly which Grade Calc Option they selected in IC.

Study Strategy Based on Your Grading Method

Your approach should differ depending on which grading system your class uses:

If Weighted Categories

  • Prioritize the highest-weight category. If tests are worth 50%, dedicate more study time to test prep than homework.
  • Don't skip low-weight categories. They still count, and they provide practice for tests.
  • Watch for weight redistribution. Early in the semester, your homework may temporarily count for more than expected. Use our Grade Simulator to model scenarios.
  • Use the Weighted Grade Calculator to see exactly where you stand.

If Total Points

  • Focus on high-point assignments. A 100-point project has 10× the impact of a 10-point homework in total points grading.
  • Don't neglect small assignments. Zeros on even small assignments add up fast.
  • Calculate your "points needed" rather than category percentages. Use the Total Points Calculator.
  • Extra credit is huge. Any extra points go straight into your total, boosting your grade directly.

"Knowing your grading method is half the battle. Once you understand the formula, you can make every study hour count."

— Campus Grade Calculator Team

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between weighted and total points grading in Infinite Campus?

Weighted grading assigns a percentage weight to each category (e.g., Tests 40%, Homework 20%) so the category matters more than raw points. Total points grading simply adds all points earned and divides by all points possible — no weights involved.

Which grading method is more common in Infinite Campus?

Weighted categories is the most common method used in middle and high schools on Infinite Campus. Total points is more popular in college-style courses, some elementary classrooms, and AP/IB classes that follow university-style syllabi.

Can one class use weighted grading and another use total points?

Yes. Each teacher selects the Grade Calc Option independently. You may have Math using weighted categories and Science using total points in the same semester. Check each class separately.

How do I know which method my class uses?

Look at the student portal. If you see percentage weights next to category names (e.g., "Tests 40%"), it's weighted. If you only see point values with no category weights, it's likely total points. You can also do a quick math check or ask your teacher.

Can the same scores produce different grades under each method?

Absolutely. The same set of scores will often produce different overall percentages. This is because weighted grading prioritizes category performance ratios, while total points treats every point equally. Use our grade calculator to compare results under both methods.

Related Calculators & Guides

Weighted Grade Calculator

Plug in your categories, weights, and scores to compute your weighted grade instantly.

Total Points Calculator

Add up all your assignment points and see your total points grade in seconds.

How IC Calculates Grades

A deep-dive into every calculation method Infinite Campus uses, including weight redistribution.

Grade Simulator

Model hypothetical assignments to see how future scores will affect your overall grade.