livelaughlove
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2015
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- HSC
- 2017
If you were aiming for a 99.95 atar (or just a really high atar) would it be better to be in a selective school or a really good public school?
Short answer:If you were aiming for a 99.95 atar (or just a really high atar) would it be better to be in a selective school or a really good public school?
Dude, are you even Asian?If you were aiming for a 99.95 atar (or just a really high atar) would it be better to be in a selective school or a really good public school?
I Think it is mostly about the pressure placed on students to do well in selective school. People tend to break down under pressure=(f/a) therefore they consequently perform much more poorly than if the pressures is not exerted on themNo selective school all the way. Wish I went to a selective.
Why would anyone thrive better at a public school unless they have low ambitions in regards to their education? The kids at selective schools are normal human beings, and in my experience nicer than the kids at public schools (but this really depends on the school).
There is also a large chance of kids being left behind in public schools, I've seen it. Teachers couldn't give two shits about you if you're not in the top class or maybe top 2 classes. Again, this is just my guess and from experience at my school.
Nah. A lot of people from comprehensive high schools are pressured to do well too.I Think it is mostly about the pressure placed on students to do well in selective school. People tend to break down under pressure=(f/a) therefore they consequently perform much more poorly than if the pressures is not exerted on them
I've had people cry in my class from the pressure, couple years ago (public school) lol. Also heard someone had to be taken away in an ambulance due to year 12 stress.Nah. A lot of people from comprehensive high schools are pressured to do well too.
While it's true that selective kids are held to high standards... it's not for no reason. A lot of us have a genuine desire to do well so when we get pressured we don't really break down but idk it's hard to explain. Like it motivates us and we have really high goals so we try really hard to reach them and I don't think as a majority we perform poorly under pressure
Moving to a selective school was the single best decision I've ever made. If you love to push yourself, and see what you're capable of, then selective schools are the way to go. I think they're better for ATAR's compared to public schools because they're filled with students who's sole aim is (gross generalisation incoming) to beat as many people as possible, and you just keep pushing each other till you're working the hardest you possibly can, collectively pushing the cohorts marks up.If you were aiming for a 99.95 atar (or just a really high atar) would it be better to be in a selective school or a really good public school?
Woah that's extremeAlso heard someone had to be taken away in an ambulance due to year 12 stress.
+1I don't really think any of this is relevant though, it's more the fact you have high achievers all in the one place. Whereas public schools have maybe 1 class of high achievers. So obviously the majority in these schools are not high achievers, thus there's no atmosphere / positive attitudes towards studying and doing well for yourself.
When kids transfer into year 11 to a selective school is it usually really hard to cope with the workload?Short answer:
Depends on the individual.
I know selective school students who would have probably done better if they had stayed back at their comprehensive school (in the case of transfer kids).
Conversely, in the case of transfer kids, I know other students who thrived more in the selective school environment than in the comprehensive/'lower ranked' school environment.
Statistically, you have 'seemingly' higher chances of a 99+ or 99.95 ATAR at a 'selective' or highly ranked 'private' school but statistics don't tell the whole story. There have been plenty of 99+ ATAR students from comprehensive schools in the past.
Depends on the individual.When kids transfer into year 11 to a selective school is it usually really hard to cope with the workload?
Some transfers thrash everyone else. Others (mainly those who get in via natural intellect) may not have any idea how to study due to being in a bad environment previously/shaky foundations, and get rekt until they learn that they need to work hard to keep on top of things.When kids transfer into year 11 to a selective school is it usually really hard to cope with the workload?