Will listing my major GPA instead of my cumulative GPA on my resume cause problems?
So I just started working in an admin position in a financial office and I think I may have slipped up. I listed my major gpa on my resume as just (GPA:#.#) as I had been under the impression that this was commonplace, and employees only wanted to know about coursework that is most relevant to the position. I'm now learning that it may not be. My major gpa is .3 higher than my cumulative. Ive completed a background check and sent my transcripts (required of all employees) about a month ago now, and nothing has been brought up. The transcripts only list the cumulative gpa, the major gpa was calculated by me.
A degree wasn't even required for the position, so of course no listed GPA requirements. They were pretty clear about hiring me based on work experience, but i'm now worried that the discrepancy may be discovered and i'll be fired for being dishonest. I'm four years out of college and wish i had just left gpa off altogether to avoid all of this stress.
Should I address this with HR? Will that get me fired? Should I just quit and start looking elsewhere?
resume human-resources ethics education
|
show 4 more comments
So I just started working in an admin position in a financial office and I think I may have slipped up. I listed my major gpa on my resume as just (GPA:#.#) as I had been under the impression that this was commonplace, and employees only wanted to know about coursework that is most relevant to the position. I'm now learning that it may not be. My major gpa is .3 higher than my cumulative. Ive completed a background check and sent my transcripts (required of all employees) about a month ago now, and nothing has been brought up. The transcripts only list the cumulative gpa, the major gpa was calculated by me.
A degree wasn't even required for the position, so of course no listed GPA requirements. They were pretty clear about hiring me based on work experience, but i'm now worried that the discrepancy may be discovered and i'll be fired for being dishonest. I'm four years out of college and wish i had just left gpa off altogether to avoid all of this stress.
Should I address this with HR? Will that get me fired? Should I just quit and start looking elsewhere?
resume human-resources ethics education
10
Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
1
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
1
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03
|
show 4 more comments
So I just started working in an admin position in a financial office and I think I may have slipped up. I listed my major gpa on my resume as just (GPA:#.#) as I had been under the impression that this was commonplace, and employees only wanted to know about coursework that is most relevant to the position. I'm now learning that it may not be. My major gpa is .3 higher than my cumulative. Ive completed a background check and sent my transcripts (required of all employees) about a month ago now, and nothing has been brought up. The transcripts only list the cumulative gpa, the major gpa was calculated by me.
A degree wasn't even required for the position, so of course no listed GPA requirements. They were pretty clear about hiring me based on work experience, but i'm now worried that the discrepancy may be discovered and i'll be fired for being dishonest. I'm four years out of college and wish i had just left gpa off altogether to avoid all of this stress.
Should I address this with HR? Will that get me fired? Should I just quit and start looking elsewhere?
resume human-resources ethics education
So I just started working in an admin position in a financial office and I think I may have slipped up. I listed my major gpa on my resume as just (GPA:#.#) as I had been under the impression that this was commonplace, and employees only wanted to know about coursework that is most relevant to the position. I'm now learning that it may not be. My major gpa is .3 higher than my cumulative. Ive completed a background check and sent my transcripts (required of all employees) about a month ago now, and nothing has been brought up. The transcripts only list the cumulative gpa, the major gpa was calculated by me.
A degree wasn't even required for the position, so of course no listed GPA requirements. They were pretty clear about hiring me based on work experience, but i'm now worried that the discrepancy may be discovered and i'll be fired for being dishonest. I'm four years out of college and wish i had just left gpa off altogether to avoid all of this stress.
Should I address this with HR? Will that get me fired? Should I just quit and start looking elsewhere?
resume human-resources ethics education
resume human-resources ethics education
edited Dec 5 '18 at 6:56
200_success
1,6891122
1,6891122
asked Dec 2 '18 at 18:05
dubma
148123
148123
10
Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
1
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
1
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03
|
show 4 more comments
10
Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
1
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
1
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03
10
10
Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
1
1
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
1
1
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03
|
show 4 more comments
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
This is almost certainly a non-issue. If it comes up clarify it then. Do not quit on the very off chance of you getting fired. Do not bring it up. Just do your job and do it well and I assure you they won't give a flying concern even if they do find out.
66
But do update your resume, either to say(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.
– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
add a comment |
You're four years out of college? Dude - nobody cares about your GPA anymore. Just leave it alone. Don't go to your boss, don't go to HR, don't mention it at all to anyone. Good, bad, or indifferent, nobody cares.
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
|
show 3 more comments
I would not worry. Your university likely does not disclose records to anyone just asking. Unless they ask you for your transcript they will not have access to your grades and in the unlikely case they do ask and bring it up, I would just explain it.
But again, the employers tend to not even verify your Alma mater.
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
add a comment |
If you're listing a GPA on a resume without any further qualification, it absolutely should be your overall GPA. You should fix your resume by either omitting your GPA entirely, changing the label to "Major GPA," or by changing the listed GPA to your overall one. Unless your GPA was particularly stellar, you're likely better off just omitting it entirely considering you already have 4+ years of work experience. No one is going to care about your GPA that much if you've already shown you're capable of doing the job well.
Having said all of that, since you already have 4+ years of experience and apparently have already been hired, it seems quite unlikely that anyone at your current job is going to care about this slip-up. In the unlikely event that someone ever does mention it, just tell them the truth: you listed your in-major GPA instead of your overall one under the mistaken impression that this was common practice. I see no point in bringing it up to your new employer at this point.
However, you really should fix it before applying for any future positions. Not listing your GPA on a resume is generally no big deal once you've been working for a while. Listing one that someone happens to notice is higher than your actual GPA, however, could cause a future hiring committee to think that you're being dishonest, which could lead them to drop you from further consideration without even telling you the reason.
add a comment |
Even if it is unusual to only list your GPA for your major, that is still your GPA for the major. It is not untrue, just ambiguous.
If you created the ambiguity intentionally then that would be dishonest, but that is another matter.
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
add a comment |
If I was a hiring manager then this would sound off all sorts of red flags such as:
- Is dubma dishonest?
- Is dubma careless?
- If they misrepresented their GPA then what else have they misrepresented?
- Did dubma even attend this college?
You are now employed at a financial office and if I am not mistaken then they probably take accuracy very seriously.
Answer me truthfully:
If your "major" GPA was lower than cumulative then which number would you have used on your resume?
Never in my life have I heard of the idea of a "major" GPA and I switched majors twice. The poor performance of my early majors is reflected forever in my GPA.
add a comment |
In my opinion while employment of a job it is considered that what you have GPA on graduation, because at that time only your qualifications are degree and grading is what matters. You have already spent your four years , now onwards your performance in work center is only counted while awarding promotion and future privileges.
I suggest while you have this weak point in your mind, you should not share it with your colleagues or your boss at all. You should give more attention towards your performance and try to get full grip on your assignment. I am 100% sure, in case management came to know regarding your GPA, they will not fire you by analyzing your performance because for boss actually your performance is essential.
add a comment |
If "a degree wasn't even required", whatever you told them about your GPA was irrelevant.
Telling lies about something that is relevant is a very bad idea, but in your case, most likely this was just "random noise" so far as the selection process was concerned - unless the selectors were wondering why someone with a degree was applying for the job when they were obviously over-qualified for it!
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is almost certainly a non-issue. If it comes up clarify it then. Do not quit on the very off chance of you getting fired. Do not bring it up. Just do your job and do it well and I assure you they won't give a flying concern even if they do find out.
66
But do update your resume, either to say(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.
– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
add a comment |
This is almost certainly a non-issue. If it comes up clarify it then. Do not quit on the very off chance of you getting fired. Do not bring it up. Just do your job and do it well and I assure you they won't give a flying concern even if they do find out.
66
But do update your resume, either to say(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.
– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
add a comment |
This is almost certainly a non-issue. If it comes up clarify it then. Do not quit on the very off chance of you getting fired. Do not bring it up. Just do your job and do it well and I assure you they won't give a flying concern even if they do find out.
This is almost certainly a non-issue. If it comes up clarify it then. Do not quit on the very off chance of you getting fired. Do not bring it up. Just do your job and do it well and I assure you they won't give a flying concern even if they do find out.
answered Dec 2 '18 at 18:21
bruglesco
1,583426
1,583426
66
But do update your resume, either to say(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.
– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
add a comment |
66
But do update your resume, either to say(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.
– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
66
66
But do update your resume, either to say
(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
But do update your resume, either to say
(Major GPA: #.#)
or to list the total GPA that matches your transcript. The term GPA, if it stands alone, does mean all-inclusive.– Ben Voigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
add a comment |
You're four years out of college? Dude - nobody cares about your GPA anymore. Just leave it alone. Don't go to your boss, don't go to HR, don't mention it at all to anyone. Good, bad, or indifferent, nobody cares.
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
|
show 3 more comments
You're four years out of college? Dude - nobody cares about your GPA anymore. Just leave it alone. Don't go to your boss, don't go to HR, don't mention it at all to anyone. Good, bad, or indifferent, nobody cares.
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
|
show 3 more comments
You're four years out of college? Dude - nobody cares about your GPA anymore. Just leave it alone. Don't go to your boss, don't go to HR, don't mention it at all to anyone. Good, bad, or indifferent, nobody cares.
You're four years out of college? Dude - nobody cares about your GPA anymore. Just leave it alone. Don't go to your boss, don't go to HR, don't mention it at all to anyone. Good, bad, or indifferent, nobody cares.
answered Dec 2 '18 at 22:53
Bob Jarvis
1,1821216
1,1821216
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
|
show 3 more comments
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
17
17
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
My PhD thesis is old enough to drink legally in the USA (so it’s older than 21 years). I was recently asked for my PhD transcripts! Some people do care! 😂
– Peter K.
Dec 2 '18 at 23:55
12
12
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
@fluffy That's ... really weird.
– Jim Clay
Dec 3 '18 at 16:08
1
1
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
@fluffy "in the real world". No.
– Sandra K
Dec 3 '18 at 16:24
1
1
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
My present company asked for my college transcripts after 10 years after my graduating college. One company always asked for my GPA even after 5 years of college. Many business applications have fields for GPAs.
– Thomas Matthews
Dec 3 '18 at 16:46
2
2
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
@SandraK Apologies, I realize in retrospect how harmful my comment was. I have deleted it.
– fluffy
Dec 4 '18 at 4:41
|
show 3 more comments
I would not worry. Your university likely does not disclose records to anyone just asking. Unless they ask you for your transcript they will not have access to your grades and in the unlikely case they do ask and bring it up, I would just explain it.
But again, the employers tend to not even verify your Alma mater.
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
add a comment |
I would not worry. Your university likely does not disclose records to anyone just asking. Unless they ask you for your transcript they will not have access to your grades and in the unlikely case they do ask and bring it up, I would just explain it.
But again, the employers tend to not even verify your Alma mater.
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
add a comment |
I would not worry. Your university likely does not disclose records to anyone just asking. Unless they ask you for your transcript they will not have access to your grades and in the unlikely case they do ask and bring it up, I would just explain it.
But again, the employers tend to not even verify your Alma mater.
I would not worry. Your university likely does not disclose records to anyone just asking. Unless they ask you for your transcript they will not have access to your grades and in the unlikely case they do ask and bring it up, I would just explain it.
But again, the employers tend to not even verify your Alma mater.
answered Dec 2 '18 at 18:23
Victor S
3,096425
3,096425
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
add a comment |
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
4
4
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
OP stated that he sent transcripts.
– Duncan X Simpson
Dec 2 '18 at 19:40
4
4
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
They probably did not even look at it beyond "okay he was taking the major he mentioned at the uni he mentioned"
– Victor S
Dec 2 '18 at 20:08
add a comment |
If you're listing a GPA on a resume without any further qualification, it absolutely should be your overall GPA. You should fix your resume by either omitting your GPA entirely, changing the label to "Major GPA," or by changing the listed GPA to your overall one. Unless your GPA was particularly stellar, you're likely better off just omitting it entirely considering you already have 4+ years of work experience. No one is going to care about your GPA that much if you've already shown you're capable of doing the job well.
Having said all of that, since you already have 4+ years of experience and apparently have already been hired, it seems quite unlikely that anyone at your current job is going to care about this slip-up. In the unlikely event that someone ever does mention it, just tell them the truth: you listed your in-major GPA instead of your overall one under the mistaken impression that this was common practice. I see no point in bringing it up to your new employer at this point.
However, you really should fix it before applying for any future positions. Not listing your GPA on a resume is generally no big deal once you've been working for a while. Listing one that someone happens to notice is higher than your actual GPA, however, could cause a future hiring committee to think that you're being dishonest, which could lead them to drop you from further consideration without even telling you the reason.
add a comment |
If you're listing a GPA on a resume without any further qualification, it absolutely should be your overall GPA. You should fix your resume by either omitting your GPA entirely, changing the label to "Major GPA," or by changing the listed GPA to your overall one. Unless your GPA was particularly stellar, you're likely better off just omitting it entirely considering you already have 4+ years of work experience. No one is going to care about your GPA that much if you've already shown you're capable of doing the job well.
Having said all of that, since you already have 4+ years of experience and apparently have already been hired, it seems quite unlikely that anyone at your current job is going to care about this slip-up. In the unlikely event that someone ever does mention it, just tell them the truth: you listed your in-major GPA instead of your overall one under the mistaken impression that this was common practice. I see no point in bringing it up to your new employer at this point.
However, you really should fix it before applying for any future positions. Not listing your GPA on a resume is generally no big deal once you've been working for a while. Listing one that someone happens to notice is higher than your actual GPA, however, could cause a future hiring committee to think that you're being dishonest, which could lead them to drop you from further consideration without even telling you the reason.
add a comment |
If you're listing a GPA on a resume without any further qualification, it absolutely should be your overall GPA. You should fix your resume by either omitting your GPA entirely, changing the label to "Major GPA," or by changing the listed GPA to your overall one. Unless your GPA was particularly stellar, you're likely better off just omitting it entirely considering you already have 4+ years of work experience. No one is going to care about your GPA that much if you've already shown you're capable of doing the job well.
Having said all of that, since you already have 4+ years of experience and apparently have already been hired, it seems quite unlikely that anyone at your current job is going to care about this slip-up. In the unlikely event that someone ever does mention it, just tell them the truth: you listed your in-major GPA instead of your overall one under the mistaken impression that this was common practice. I see no point in bringing it up to your new employer at this point.
However, you really should fix it before applying for any future positions. Not listing your GPA on a resume is generally no big deal once you've been working for a while. Listing one that someone happens to notice is higher than your actual GPA, however, could cause a future hiring committee to think that you're being dishonest, which could lead them to drop you from further consideration without even telling you the reason.
If you're listing a GPA on a resume without any further qualification, it absolutely should be your overall GPA. You should fix your resume by either omitting your GPA entirely, changing the label to "Major GPA," or by changing the listed GPA to your overall one. Unless your GPA was particularly stellar, you're likely better off just omitting it entirely considering you already have 4+ years of work experience. No one is going to care about your GPA that much if you've already shown you're capable of doing the job well.
Having said all of that, since you already have 4+ years of experience and apparently have already been hired, it seems quite unlikely that anyone at your current job is going to care about this slip-up. In the unlikely event that someone ever does mention it, just tell them the truth: you listed your in-major GPA instead of your overall one under the mistaken impression that this was common practice. I see no point in bringing it up to your new employer at this point.
However, you really should fix it before applying for any future positions. Not listing your GPA on a resume is generally no big deal once you've been working for a while. Listing one that someone happens to notice is higher than your actual GPA, however, could cause a future hiring committee to think that you're being dishonest, which could lead them to drop you from further consideration without even telling you the reason.
answered Dec 3 '18 at 9:30
reirab
1,034717
1,034717
add a comment |
add a comment |
Even if it is unusual to only list your GPA for your major, that is still your GPA for the major. It is not untrue, just ambiguous.
If you created the ambiguity intentionally then that would be dishonest, but that is another matter.
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
add a comment |
Even if it is unusual to only list your GPA for your major, that is still your GPA for the major. It is not untrue, just ambiguous.
If you created the ambiguity intentionally then that would be dishonest, but that is another matter.
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
add a comment |
Even if it is unusual to only list your GPA for your major, that is still your GPA for the major. It is not untrue, just ambiguous.
If you created the ambiguity intentionally then that would be dishonest, but that is another matter.
Even if it is unusual to only list your GPA for your major, that is still your GPA for the major. It is not untrue, just ambiguous.
If you created the ambiguity intentionally then that would be dishonest, but that is another matter.
answered Dec 2 '18 at 19:52
PStag
31815
31815
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
add a comment |
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
It was not dishonest at the time, because you assumed they would interpret it as your in-major GPA. Now that you are aware that you were incorrect in that assumption, it would be dishonest to not clarify what you meant. I doubt they'll care about a small difference in GPA, but you should inform them anyway.
– Ray
Dec 4 '18 at 1:09
add a comment |
If I was a hiring manager then this would sound off all sorts of red flags such as:
- Is dubma dishonest?
- Is dubma careless?
- If they misrepresented their GPA then what else have they misrepresented?
- Did dubma even attend this college?
You are now employed at a financial office and if I am not mistaken then they probably take accuracy very seriously.
Answer me truthfully:
If your "major" GPA was lower than cumulative then which number would you have used on your resume?
Never in my life have I heard of the idea of a "major" GPA and I switched majors twice. The poor performance of my early majors is reflected forever in my GPA.
add a comment |
If I was a hiring manager then this would sound off all sorts of red flags such as:
- Is dubma dishonest?
- Is dubma careless?
- If they misrepresented their GPA then what else have they misrepresented?
- Did dubma even attend this college?
You are now employed at a financial office and if I am not mistaken then they probably take accuracy very seriously.
Answer me truthfully:
If your "major" GPA was lower than cumulative then which number would you have used on your resume?
Never in my life have I heard of the idea of a "major" GPA and I switched majors twice. The poor performance of my early majors is reflected forever in my GPA.
add a comment |
If I was a hiring manager then this would sound off all sorts of red flags such as:
- Is dubma dishonest?
- Is dubma careless?
- If they misrepresented their GPA then what else have they misrepresented?
- Did dubma even attend this college?
You are now employed at a financial office and if I am not mistaken then they probably take accuracy very seriously.
Answer me truthfully:
If your "major" GPA was lower than cumulative then which number would you have used on your resume?
Never in my life have I heard of the idea of a "major" GPA and I switched majors twice. The poor performance of my early majors is reflected forever in my GPA.
If I was a hiring manager then this would sound off all sorts of red flags such as:
- Is dubma dishonest?
- Is dubma careless?
- If they misrepresented their GPA then what else have they misrepresented?
- Did dubma even attend this college?
You are now employed at a financial office and if I am not mistaken then they probably take accuracy very seriously.
Answer me truthfully:
If your "major" GPA was lower than cumulative then which number would you have used on your resume?
Never in my life have I heard of the idea of a "major" GPA and I switched majors twice. The poor performance of my early majors is reflected forever in my GPA.
answered Dec 3 '18 at 18:51
MonkeyZeus
3,55411024
3,55411024
add a comment |
add a comment |
In my opinion while employment of a job it is considered that what you have GPA on graduation, because at that time only your qualifications are degree and grading is what matters. You have already spent your four years , now onwards your performance in work center is only counted while awarding promotion and future privileges.
I suggest while you have this weak point in your mind, you should not share it with your colleagues or your boss at all. You should give more attention towards your performance and try to get full grip on your assignment. I am 100% sure, in case management came to know regarding your GPA, they will not fire you by analyzing your performance because for boss actually your performance is essential.
add a comment |
In my opinion while employment of a job it is considered that what you have GPA on graduation, because at that time only your qualifications are degree and grading is what matters. You have already spent your four years , now onwards your performance in work center is only counted while awarding promotion and future privileges.
I suggest while you have this weak point in your mind, you should not share it with your colleagues or your boss at all. You should give more attention towards your performance and try to get full grip on your assignment. I am 100% sure, in case management came to know regarding your GPA, they will not fire you by analyzing your performance because for boss actually your performance is essential.
add a comment |
In my opinion while employment of a job it is considered that what you have GPA on graduation, because at that time only your qualifications are degree and grading is what matters. You have already spent your four years , now onwards your performance in work center is only counted while awarding promotion and future privileges.
I suggest while you have this weak point in your mind, you should not share it with your colleagues or your boss at all. You should give more attention towards your performance and try to get full grip on your assignment. I am 100% sure, in case management came to know regarding your GPA, they will not fire you by analyzing your performance because for boss actually your performance is essential.
In my opinion while employment of a job it is considered that what you have GPA on graduation, because at that time only your qualifications are degree and grading is what matters. You have already spent your four years , now onwards your performance in work center is only counted while awarding promotion and future privileges.
I suggest while you have this weak point in your mind, you should not share it with your colleagues or your boss at all. You should give more attention towards your performance and try to get full grip on your assignment. I am 100% sure, in case management came to know regarding your GPA, they will not fire you by analyzing your performance because for boss actually your performance is essential.
edited Dec 4 '18 at 13:56
Michael Karas
1,9311612
1,9311612
answered Dec 3 '18 at 7:14
Ahmad Raza
678127
678127
add a comment |
add a comment |
If "a degree wasn't even required", whatever you told them about your GPA was irrelevant.
Telling lies about something that is relevant is a very bad idea, but in your case, most likely this was just "random noise" so far as the selection process was concerned - unless the selectors were wondering why someone with a degree was applying for the job when they were obviously over-qualified for it!
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
add a comment |
If "a degree wasn't even required", whatever you told them about your GPA was irrelevant.
Telling lies about something that is relevant is a very bad idea, but in your case, most likely this was just "random noise" so far as the selection process was concerned - unless the selectors were wondering why someone with a degree was applying for the job when they were obviously over-qualified for it!
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
add a comment |
If "a degree wasn't even required", whatever you told them about your GPA was irrelevant.
Telling lies about something that is relevant is a very bad idea, but in your case, most likely this was just "random noise" so far as the selection process was concerned - unless the selectors were wondering why someone with a degree was applying for the job when they were obviously over-qualified for it!
If "a degree wasn't even required", whatever you told them about your GPA was irrelevant.
Telling lies about something that is relevant is a very bad idea, but in your case, most likely this was just "random noise" so far as the selection process was concerned - unless the selectors were wondering why someone with a degree was applying for the job when they were obviously over-qualified for it!
answered Dec 2 '18 at 22:25
alephzero
2,4591713
2,4591713
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
add a comment |
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
1
1
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
Not being a requirement does not mean it's irrelevant does it ?
– zakinster
Dec 3 '18 at 10:03
add a comment |
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Please tag this with a location. Most answers make my hair stand on end for my part of the world, but since you mentioned "GPA" I think they are correct for your location. But only your location, this is not globally valid.
– nvoigt
Dec 2 '18 at 22:50
1
I asked a similar question, might help: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/114940/…
– Nathan Goings
Dec 3 '18 at 7:13
In which country are you? In most western countries, no one would care about your gpa, but only about your diplomas and experience. Especially if you are already working for the company and performing well (this should be your only concern right now). But some countries (ex: South Korea) focus a lot on the university you attended, your gpa and test scores (TOEIC,...)
– Taladris
Dec 3 '18 at 8:58
0.3 is such a small amount, no one is likely to care. But it's such a small amount, why was it worth fudging it in the first place?
– Kyralessa
Dec 3 '18 at 9:42
1
A 0.3 difference isn't necessarily a small amount. Going from 2.5 to 2.8 is a small amount. Going from 3.7 to 4.0 is a much bigger deal, as is something like going from 2.8 to 3.1 when the job lists a 3.0 minimum.
– Karl Bielefeldt
Dec 3 '18 at 18:03