Education - P2
English Assignment Planner
English Assignment Planner for quick calculations, comparisons, formatting, and practical browser-based results.
About English Assignment Planner
Students and teachers alike face recurring calculation and organisation tasks — grading on a curve, converting marks to letter grades, planning study sessions — that eat up time better spent on the actual subject matter. English Assignment Planner handles one of those tasks precisely, running the numbers in your browser so you can focus on learning. No account is needed and no data ever leaves your device.
How to use English Assignment Planner
- Enter the scores, dates, or parameters that match your academic context.
- Select the grading scale or subject area if the tool offers multiple modes.
- Press calculate to see the result with an explanation of the method used.
- Export or copy the output to paste into a gradebook, study plan, or parent report.
Frequently asked questions
- Which grading scale does English Assignment Planner use by default?
- It defaults to a common percentage-based scale (A = 90–100, B = 80–89, etc.). You can adjust the thresholds in the settings panel if your institution uses a different scale.
- Can teachers use this for an entire class at once?
- Tools that accept a list input can process all students in one go. Paste one score per line and the tool returns a column of results you can copy into a spreadsheet.
- Are student scores or names stored anywhere?
- No. All data is processed client-side in the browser and disappears when the tab is closed. Nothing is sent to or stored on our servers.
- Is the result accurate enough for official transcripts?
- The arithmetic is correct, but official transcripts must follow your institution's specific policy. Use this tool to prepare drafts and then confirm against official rubrics.
- Does the tool account for weighted assignments?
- Weighted-grade tools let you assign a percentage weight to each category (homework, tests, projects). Unweighted tools assume equal contribution — check the label before using.
Common use cases
- Converting a raw percentage score to a letter grade for a report card
- Calculating a GPA from multiple course grades and credit hours
- Estimating the score needed on a final exam to achieve a target grade
- Planning a spaced-repetition study schedule for an upcoming exam
- Splitting a class into equally sized project groups