Free Printable Grading Charts for Teachers and Students

Whether you are a teacher grading a stack of quizzes, a student keeping track of your own scores, or a parent reviewing your child’s progress, a well-designed grading chart saves time and removes confusion. This page gives you five ready-to-use printable grading charts one for each common classroom situation along with a clear explanation of how to read and use each one.

All charts on this page are free to download and print. If you want to skip the manual work entirely, the Quick Grade Calculator converts any score to a percentage and letter grade instantly but for situations where you need a physical record, these charts cover everything.

Chart 1 — Basic Single Assignment Grading Chart

Use this chart when you have a single quiz, test, or assignment and want to record every student’s score in one place. It includes columns for marks earned, total possible marks, calculated percentage, letter grade, and brief remarks. This is the most commonly used format in primary and secondary school classrooms.

Chart 1 of 5 — Single Assignment
# Student Name Marks Earned Total Marks Percentage Letter Grade Remarks
1Ahmad Raza485096%A+Outstanding
2Sara Malik435086%B+Very good
3James Okafor385076%C+Satisfactory
4Priya Sharma345068%DNeeds improvement
5Carlos Rivera275054%FBelow passing
6
7
8
9
10
📄 Printable PDF — Basic Single Assignment Chart (A4, portrait) Download PDF

Chart 2 — Multi-Assignment Tracker (Semester View)

This chart is designed for teachers who want to track multiple assignments for the same class in one document. Each column represents one assignment or test. At the end of the semester, you can total each row to calculate a student’s cumulative score. This format works well for courses with 4–8 graded items per semester.

For courses with weighted assignments — where the final exam counts more than a quiz — see Chart 4 below which includes a weighting column.

Chart 2 of 5 — Multi-Assignment Semester Tracker
Student Name Quiz 1 /20 HW 1 /10 Midterm /50 Quiz 2 /20 HW 2 /10 Final /100 Total /210 % Grade
Ahmad Raza1894417108818688.6%B+
Sara Malik168391597416176.7%C+
James Okafor147351386814569.0%D
💡 Teacher tip: To calculate the percentage column, divide the student’s total by 210 then multiply by 100. Example: 186 ÷ 210 × 100 = 88.6%. Replace 210 with your own maximum total if your course has a different structure.

Chart 3 — Student Self-Tracking Chart

This chart is designed for students, not teachers. Students fill it in themselves as results come back throughout the semester. Keeping a personal record of every grade — rather than relying on a portal that may update late — gives students a clear and accurate picture of where they stand at any point during the course.

Research consistently shows that students who actively monitor their own academic progress perform better than those who check grades passively. This chart makes self-monitoring concrete and easy to maintain.

Chart 3 of 5 — Student Self-Tracker
Date Assignment / Test Name Category Marks Earned Out Of Percentage Grade Notes / Follow-up
Jan 15Chapter 2 QuizQuiz142070%CReview section 2.3
Jan 28Homework Set 1Homework182090%AGood
Feb 10Midterm ExamExam375074%C+Study formulas for final
Total / Average
After filling in each result, use the Quick Grade Calculator to verify your percentage instantly — especially useful when marks are out of unusual totals like 35, 65, or 120.

Chart 4 — Weighted Grade Tracking Chart

Many courses do not treat all assignments equally. A final exam worth 40% of your grade counts far more than a quiz worth 5%. This chart includes a weight column so teachers and students can calculate a proper weighted average rather than a simple average of all scores.

This format is standard in US colleges and universities, and increasingly common in secondary schools that use category-based grading systems.

How to use it: Multiply each Score % by its Weight percentage expressed as a decimal. For example, scoring 85% on homework weighted at 20% gives you 85 × 0.20 = 17.0 weighted points. Add all weighted points for the final course grade.

Chart 4 of 5 — Weighted Grade Chart
Category Weight Marks Earned Total Marks Score % Weighted Points
Homework20%8510085%17.0
Quizzes15%7210072%10.8
Midterm Exam25%7810078%19.5
Participation10%91090%9.0
Final Exam30%8110081%24.3
Total100%80.6% → B
💡 Important check: Make sure your Weight column adds up to exactly 100% before you start. If weights sum to 95% or 105%, your final grade will be wrong. This is the most common error in weighted grading charts.

Chart 5 — Percentage to Letter Grade Reference Chart

This reference chart maps every percentage range to its corresponding letter grade under three different grading scales — the standard US scale, a stricter 80% pass requirement scale used in some professional programs, and the Philippine DepEd scale used in Filipino schools. Print it and keep it in a planner or pin it to a classroom wall.

Chart 5 of 5 — Grade Reference Chart
Percentage Range US Standard Scale Strict Scale (80% pass) Philippine DepEd Scale
97% – 100%A+A+Outstanding (97–100)
93% – 96%AAOutstanding
90% – 92%A−A−Outstanding
87% – 89%B+B+Very Satisfactory (86–96)
83% – 86%BBVery Satisfactory
80% – 82%B−B−Very Satisfactory
77% – 79%C+D+Satisfactory (76–85)
73% – 76%CDSatisfactory
70% – 72%C−D−Fairly Satisfactory (66–75)
67% – 69%D+FFairly Satisfactory
63% – 66%DFDid Not Meet Expectations
60% – 62%D−FDid Not Meet Expectations
Below 60%FFDid Not Meet Expectations (below 75)
Note for Philippine teachers and students: DepEd uses a numerical descriptor system rather than A–F letter grades. The passing mark is 75% for all Grades 1–12 in public schools. Any score below 75 is classified as “Did Not Meet Expectations” regardless of how close it is to the cutoff.

How to Use These Charts Effectively

Printing the chart is only the first step. Here is how to get real value from each one:

  1. Choose the right chart for your situation. Single test? Use Chart 1. Tracking a full semester? Use Chart 2 for teachers or Chart 3 for students. Course with weighted categories? Use Chart 4. Need a quick grade reference to post on a classroom wall? Print Chart 5.

  2. Write in the total marks column before distributing. For Charts 1 and 2, fill in the maximum possible marks for each assignment before students hand in their work. This prevents confusion when calculating percentages later.

  3. Calculate the percentage column accurately. Divide marks earned by total marks, then multiply by 100. For more than a few students, the Quick Grade Calculator handles this in one step — enter total questions and wrong answers and it returns the percentage and letter grade immediately.

  4. Use the remarks column deliberately. Avoid vague phrases like “Good work” or “Try harder.” A useful remark identifies something specific: “Strong on fractions, weak on algebra” or “Missed 3 questions all from Chapter 4 — review that section.” This turns the chart into an actionable record, not just a list of numbers.

  5. For Chart 4, always verify your weights total 100%. Before you start, add up all weights: 20% + 15% + 25% + 10% + 30% = 100%. If the total is anything other than 100%, your final grade calculation will be off. Fix the weights first.

Grading Scale Standards by Country

If you are using these charts outside the United States, the percentage-to-grade conversion may not match your local standard. Here is a summary of passing marks and grade formats across the countries our users come from most:

Country / System Passing Mark Highest Grade Grade Format
United States (standard)60%A+ (97–100%)Letter (A–F)
Philippines (DepEd)75%Outstanding (97–100)Numerical descriptor
Pakistan (Federal Board)33%A1 (90–100%)Letter with divisions
India (CBSE)33%A1 (91–100%)Letter grade + GPA
United Kingdom40%First Class (70%+)Degree classification
Canada (most provinces)50%A+ (90–100%)Letter (A–F)
Australia50%High Distinction (85%+)Descriptor

For a detailed breakdown of how passing marks work by country — including how many questions you can miss at each passing threshold — see our complete guide on how many questions you can miss and still pass, which includes reference tables for every common test size from 10 to 100 questions.

When a Paper Chart Is Not Enough

Printable charts work well for in-the-moment classroom grading, but they have practical limits. You cannot automatically calculate weighted totals, and updating scores mid-semester means rewriting. For situations involving multiple weighted components, ongoing tracking across a full year, or calculating exactly what score you need on a final exam to reach a target grade, a digital calculator removes the manual work entirely.

The Passing Score Calculator tells you the exact minimum marks you need to pass any exam based on your current standing in the course. If you are trying to figure out what you need on an upcoming final to reach 70%, 80%, or any other target, it handles the weighted calculation in seconds.

Quick guide — which tool to use:

Paper chart → Recording scores in the classroom or student planner
Quick Grade Calculator → Instant percentage and letter grade from any score
Passing Score Calculator → Minimum score needed to pass an upcoming exam

Last updated: April 2026  |  Written by Emma Carter, Education Writer

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