Checking Your Grades¶
Opening the Gradebook¶
Click "Grades" in the course sidebar. You'll see a list of all assessments in the course with your current score on each.
What the Gradebook Shows¶
Each row in the gradebook corresponds to one assessment:
- Assessment name — click to see question-by-question detail
- Score — your score as a percentage (or points, depending on how your instructor configured it)
- Due date — when the assessment was or is due
If your instructor has set up grade categories (e.g., Homework 30%, Quizzes 20%, Tests 50%), the gradebook may show a weighted total at the bottom.
Viewing Detailed Results¶
Click an assessment name in the gradebook to see your detailed results. Depending on your instructor's settings, you may see:
- Your answer to each question
- Whether each answer was correct
- The correct answer
- Instructor-written feedback or solution text
If feedback is hidden, the gradebook will show only your total score. Some instructors reveal feedback after the due date — check back then if you don't see details right away.
Scores Not Showing¶
"Not graded" on an essay or file upload — your instructor grades these manually. Check back after the due date. Once your instructor posts a grade, it will appear.
No score at all — either you haven't submitted yet, or the assessment is still within the grading period. If you believe you submitted but see no score, contact your instructor.
If You Think a Grade Is Wrong¶
- Click the assessment in the gradebook to view your submission
- Review your answers and the feedback
- If you still believe there's an error, contact your instructor with the assessment name, question number, and an explanation of what you think went wrong
Support cannot change grades — only your instructor can.
Final Grade¶
Varsity Learning does not automatically calculate or display a letter grade. Your instructor determines the grading scale for the course. Refer to your course syllabus for how final grades are calculated.
If you want to estimate your current standing, add up your scores across all graded assessments and compare them against the point totals or weights defined in your syllabus.