Showing posts with label calculate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calculate. Show all posts

Calculate Pain And Suffering The Right Way And Settle Your Car Accident

How to calculate pain and suffering? This is a difficult and controversial issue. When you are in a car accident, the insurance company wants to get a written document that releases any and all claims against the person that caused your damages and injuries. To get that release, the insurance
adjuster must compensate you adequately.

You are entitled to special damages (medical bills, wage loss, medicine, etc.) and general damages (pain and suffering, loss of consortium, physiological injuries, etc.) Most of the time, calculating the Special Damages is not very difficult and there is not much debate over the value of the medical bills, wage loss, and other medical expenses. You can add them all up and submit your receipts. However, calculating general damages, which includes pain and suffering, can be very difficult.

How much is your headache worth? Depends who you ask. If you ask the insurance adjuster, she will tell you about $5. If I ask you, then it is probably worth much more than that.

Personal injury attorneys use the medical bills or all "special damages" as a way to calculate general damages. Some multiply the medical bills by two, other by three or even four times (depends in your
jurisdiction). This is only a rule of thumb. The insurance adjuster will fight you and will tell you that that is not an accurate way to calculate pain and suffering. There are no laws that will give you a formula to calculate the value of the injury.

Simply multiplying your medical bills will not yield an accurate number. You could have an injury with medical bills of $2,000 but the pain and suffering be worth much more than three or even four times that value. For example, a fifteen year old girl that suffers a cut in her face, leaving a scar from her eye to her chin. Medical bills for stitches and cleaning the wound might not be very much, but the psychological injury of growing up with such injury could be worth much more.

Multiplying the medical bills is not very accurate when assessing the value of pain and suffering, however it can guide you. Remember that there are many more claim than just "pain and suffering" in a car accident. You can ask for loss of consortium, loss of earning capacity, loss of quality of life, etc. For a detailed list and explanation of each type of claim, visit http://www.auto-insurance-claim-advice.com/bodily-injury-claim.html. All of these claims can add to a lot of money. Most people forget to ask for any of those types of damages. Insurance companies do not explain the process and they just want a release for any and all claims, including all those damages you forgot or did know to ask for. Insurance companies do this on purpose. Be aware.

Insurance adjusters are ready to tell you that the value of the injury is separated from the accident itself. They are trained to argue that they are settling for the neck pain, not the fact that the total loss settlement
was low. They try to narrow the scope of the settlement. For example, they will tell you that the fact that the driver that hit was drunk is not accounted for because they are looking at pain and suffering. Your pain will not be more or less because someone else was drunk. If you were hit at the same speed and the
same conditions by a sober person, your pain and suffering would be the same (same impact, same injury).

The insurance adjuster would be correct; the pain would be the same. But remember that what the insurance company is doing is "buying your lawsuit". Would the fact that a driver hit you while intoxicated increase the value a jury would award you? I think the answer is probably yes.

To get the most out for your pain and suffering, use the value of your medical bills, the circumstances surrounding the accident, the type of injury, similar cases jury awards, and all the bodily injury claims you
can make. Double check every argument the insurance adjuster is making. Make sure you are getting a fair treatment.

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How to calculate grade point average

A grade point average is a way of considering a student's performance as a single number. In the broadest sense it is an average of the grades a student has achieved in all of its programs. Grade point average as an opportunity for educational institutions, the results of comparing students from different schools.

GPA

There are several ways of calculating a Grade Point Average with secondary and tertiary schools with different methods. Commonsecondary schools, high schools, such as a direct average of the marks has a student can achieve, while the tertiary education institutions such as universities also take into account the associated credit points for each course in the calculation of the average.

This article is a how to grade point average (GPA) in a second environment to calculate how high school. At the international level, there are measured differences in the way different provinces or districts, and record student performance, but the4.0-point scale used to calculate a GPA is becoming a widely used standard. For students, the easiest way is that you have a GPA calculated as follows.

The mathematics

First, each grade is assigned a numerical value. For example, using the common set of letter grades from A, B, C, D and F is the value of each grade:

A = 4.0
B = 3.0
C = 2.0
D = 1.0
F = 0.0

Your school can have different qualities and values, but the method to determineGPA is the same in every case. The calculation of the GPA requires the total value of the notes and then divided by the number of notes. This results in an average, is between 0 and 4.0. Were the highest with 4.0 GPA and 0 the lowest.

Unweighted GPA

Here is a concrete example. Student Michel has achieved these grades A, B, A, A, C, B, A, and A for the semester. Converting this type, the numerical values it at 4.0, 3.0, 4.0, 4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, and4.0. Adding this to (4.0 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 4.0 + 2.0 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 4.0) corresponds to 28th Now to get the average of the total, is the number of classes, divided the 8, and the average is (28. / 8) corresponds to 3.5. So that the GPA is 3.5 for Michel.

The steps in this calculation are simple and easy to make, but if you need to calculate the GPA for a large crowd of students then, a computer application is recommended that you save time and reduce errors. With a spreadsheet, you canCalculations, or more time a specific program such as the Gradebook program can also letter grades to a final GPA to convert into a single action to save.

One complication to consider, is calculated as the Grade Point Average, if there classes, work on an accelerated or higher level. For example, schools may have courses on an Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, or honors level. In calculating the GPA, adjustments are made so that students in the higherCourses will receive a higher GPA.

Weighted GPA

When this happens, it is called a weighted GPA. Continued Example Michel with the same list of classes, where the first three classes of Advanced Placement (AP) courses, if these three stages are converted to a numeric value that it increases by a pre-specified amount, are around the average increase in students .

In this way takes into account a weighted GPA that reflects an "A" in an AP course should be a higher level ofPerformance as an "A" in a regular course. And so, students are rewarded for the more difficult study. Since it is a constructed as a weighted GPA, GPA, do not take into account the level of the courses is as unweighted GPA.

The amount that each class is determined by the will differ in schools increased, but in this example obtained by the AP courses have an additional 0.20 each class. This makes the values 4.2, 3.2, 4.2, 4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0 and 4.0, since 0.2 was the first one hasthree values. Thus, the new weighted GPA is is (4.2 + 3.2 + 4.2 + 4.0 + 2.0 + 3.0 + 4.0 + 4.0) / 8, which at 3.58 to 2 equivalent decimal places. With The Gradebook program is the possibility of weighting the scores to a weight that you specify, or you can let the program do an unweighted GPA.

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