huhwotsthis
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- Joined
- Apr 2, 2008
- Messages
- 264
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- HSC
- 2009
i wish i knew about scaling when i chose my subjects
As teachers at my school like to say, "All the scaling in the world won't help you if you're failing at extension 2 math."i wish i knew about scaling when i chose my subjects
oh it will help (@mx2 thing)As teachers at my school like to say, "All the scaling in the world won't help you if you're failing at extension 2 math."
You should choose your subjects based on your likes and strengths. Of course if you strengths are "higher scaling" subjects, then go for it XD
+1oh it will help (@mx2 thing)
much better to fail mx2 rather than, say, gen maths
scaling wouldnt have stopped me choosing the subjects i want to do. theres no point picking say extension maths cos you know know it scales well if you cant handle the work.i wish i knew about scaling when i chose my subjects
Advanced English doesn't scale more than Standard English, it just happens through coincidence that Advanced English students are better at english than Standard English (in general). So more people in advanced do better than the students in standard.but then again, scaling is what differentiates a student from other students in their cohort.
Top HSC students (whether by research or their own instincts) not only understand scaling, they actively use it as a tool to score the highest possible UAI.
You see, the bos will adjust the highest mark, median mark and standard deviation so that all subjects are directly comparable
Some subjects that are considered harder will be scaled higher, whilst some subjects in which it is easy to score high marks will be scaled downwards (e.g. adv english scales better than std english...)
I suppose the subjects that are scaled higher are the ones that are subjectively harder... e.g. everyone can draw a picture, but not everyone can solve lets say, variable denominator inequalities...
but the syllabus is different for both subjects, e.g. std english ppl dont have to our adv english critical study stuff... I think its just called a 'close study' for them, hence making it easierAdvanced English doesn't scale more than Standard English, it just happens through coincidence that Advanced English students are better at english than Standard English (in general). So more people in advanced do better than the students in standard.
but then again, scaling is what differentiates a student from other students in their cohort.
Top HSC students (whether by research or their own instincts) not only understand scaling, they actively use it as a tool to score the highest possible UAI.
You see, the bos will adjust the highest mark, median mark and standard deviation so that all subjects are directly comparable
Some subjects that are considered harder will be scaled higher, whilst some subjects in which it is easy to score high marks will be scaled downwards (e.g. adv english scales better than std english...)
I suppose the subjects that are scaled higher are the ones that are subjectively harder... e.g. everyone can draw a picture, but not everyone can solve lets say, variable denominator inequalities...
wait wait wait, does this mean the ranks are not the only important thing?but then again, scaling is what differentiates a student from other students in their cohort.
Top HSC students (whether by research or their own instincts) not only understand scaling, they actively use it as a tool to score the highest possible UAI.
You see, the bos will adjust the highest mark, median mark and standard deviation so that all subjects are directly comparable
Some subjects that are considered harder will be scaled higher, whilst some subjects in which it is easy to score high marks will be scaled downwards (e.g. adv english scales better than std english...)
I suppose the subjects that are scaled higher are the ones that are subjectively harder... e.g. everyone can draw a picture, but not everyone can solve lets say, variable denominator inequalities...
not first, nowait wait wait, does this mean the ranks are not the only important thing?
lets say if u come first by 1 mark or first by 20 marks will it make a difference?
depends on your external markIm so confused.. say I am coming 1st in drama, but the person coming 2nd is only 2 marks below me... if i keep this up will I still beat her in the HSC once I finish exams?
I may be wrong here, but I think anyone who is a lower rank than you in your school, and who you beat in the HSC doesnt affect your mark (bar influencing the scaling of the subject).Im so confused.. say I am coming 1st in drama, but the person coming 2nd is only 2 marks below me... if i keep this up will I still beat her in the HSC once I finish exams?
I believe that is Correct, but its 100% vaild if you remain 1st in both cases.I may be wrong here, but I think anyone who is a lower rank than you in your school, and who you beat in the HSC doesnt affect your mark (bar influencing the scaling of the subject).
So if you continue to get better marks than the current 2nd in both assesments and externals, then yes you will still beat them
Ditto. I would die at Music/VA. I can't draw, I can't play music, and the creative bones in my body are quite brittle.^what's the definition of "difficult"? Doe scaling determine the "difficulty" of the course?
I mean, if I were to do difficult subjects, I would have done Industrial Technology, Visual Arts, Music 2, Music Extension and all those subjects that I suck at.