There are an average of 1860 rechecks a year and in past years there has been between 5 and 28 changes made.Has it ever worked for anyone where they actually change their marks?
He should have, it's stated that way in the BOS guidelines (dunno exactly where though, soz). If they don't find an error though... there goes a chunk of moneyI'd definitely do it if not for how much it costs. Just out of interest Aerath: do you know if your friend got his recheck fee refunded?
I have no idea. Sorry, I'll ask though.Just out of interest Aerath: do you know if your friend got his recheck fee refunded?
I wonder why English is almost double the cost of any other papers (at $27) if all they are going to do is re-add 6 numbers together (no. of exam sections).In fact, noone actually 'remarks' your work. They just check all papers have been marked and that the marks are totalled correctly.
Becos its two separate exams, double the cost to check it. Every answer book is stored in a different area.I wonder why English is almost double the cost of any other papers (at $27) if all they are going to do is re-add 6 numbers together (no. of exam sections).
Not only two separate exams but multiple exam centres as well resulting in multiple clerical teams and thus all the storage being different.Becos its two separate exams, double the cost to check it. Every answer book is stored in a different area.
i'm pretty sure you can loose marks, but its unlikeyCan you actually lose marks?
And if you get extra marks does that mean that your atar is re-calculated?
They do need the answer booklets. Part of the clerical recheck process is that any question scored as a non-attempt actually contained no attempt. This requires a visual inspection of the student's booklets.They don't actually need the exam booklets. All they need are the mark sheets, which, by the end of marking, have been removed from the bundles of scripts and stored together with the rest from that centre on that question.
cem's a teacher, and a HSC marker. Think she might know a bit more about this than you do.They do need the answer booklets. Part of the clerical recheck process is that any question scored as a non-attempt actually contained no attempt. This requires a visual inspection of the student's booklets.
Well, HSC markers aren't directly involved in clerical rechecks I presume, and BOSBOY knows far, far too much about everything BOS-related... it makes sense that they would check the answer booklets to confirm if there was a non-attempt, just to make sure the papers were distributed correctly.cem's a teacher, and a HSC marker. Think she might know a bit more about this than you do.
BOSBOY may be correct on this but I do know that when I have marked all NAs are checked by the clerical staff at the time to ensure that the booklet is correctly marked as a Non Attempt - this happens at a number of times - at the centre where you sat the exam, when the booklets reach the marking centre, during the marking process where a marker finds a booklet without Non Attempt written on the outside but a non attempt on the inside (particularly in multi-part questions where Part a is attempted but Part b isn't) and again, for my subject, when the sheets are returned to the clerical staff - so whether another check is done for a recheck I don't know.Well, HSC markers aren't directly involved in clerical rechecks I presume, and BOSBOY knows far, far too much about everything BOS-related... it makes sense that they would check the answer booklets to confirm if there was a non-attempt, just to make sure the papers were distributed correctly.
Oh dear, fools rush in ...cem's a teacher, and a HSC marker. Think she might know a bit more about this than you do.