studygirl118
Member
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2017
- Messages
- 146
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2018
In your opinion, what are some harsh truths about the hsc that no one ever told you?
Can't really think of one but I'll just say the HSC is basically like another trial paper so nothing to be stressed about... ALSO I honestly think our school's trial system of 3 sets of trials was so helpful because my friend and I weren't stressed at all for the HSC while friends were really stressed because we had so much practice in the environment already.In your opinion, what are some harsh truths about the hsc that no one ever told you?
Probably how overrated it is in terms of its impact on your future. Like, the HSC has so much hype surrounding it and people put so much energy into getting a good ATAR. Realistically though, unless you want to get into a course which requires a high ATAR (namely medicine) or a scholarship, it really is worthless. I studied my ass off and got a fairly decent ATAR - then I went to uni and I was with people who got almost 40 points lower. That's when it hit me that it was overrated.In your opinion, what are some harsh truths about the hsc that no one ever told you?
Fully agreed should've done more sport and other extracurriculars would've been more usefulProbably how overrated it is in terms of its impact on your future. Like, the HSC has so much hype surrounding it and people put so much energy into getting a good ATAR. Realistically though, unless you want to get into a course which requires a high ATAR (namely medicine) or a scholarship, it really is worthless. I studied my ass off and got a fairly decent ATAR - then I went to uni and I was with people who got almost 40 points lower. That's when it hit me that it was overrated.
8 years on, I look at people I went to school with and honestly, it's shocking how little it impacted their futures. I know people who were absolute bums in school who have done really well - I also know a few who did really well and are either still at uni or working dead end jobs. The way HSC was hyped, at the time I thought a good ATAR would set you up for success, whilst a bad one would seriously hurt your prospects.
If I had my time again, I wouldnt have invested all that energy, it was a complete waste to be honest.
I should have played less dota and done more of anything else lolFully agreed should've done more sport and other extracurriculars would've been more useful
Nah had normal assessment schedule just had more trialsThat would actually be SO helpful to have three trials. So basically were all your assessments throughout Year 12 just like trial exams?
RIP NESA now restricts max 4 assessment tasks in the HSC and only one of them can be an exam, that is the trial (however, this doesn't apply for maths I believe).I think all schools should adopt this tbh it just helps so much with the HSC but it'll require more work from students...
Hey!Its too late to change anything drastic so what I can possibly do differently apart from exam revisions?
7. is literally life1. That nobody cares about your HSC mark once you get into uni.
2. That there's so many alternative pathways into your preferred degree.
3. That many people switch out of their degree after their first year or two (or even three) since they realise its not what they want to do.
4. That nobody cares about your uni degree(s) once you start working.
5. That everything you learn in uni is forgotten after each semester, such that by the time you graduate, you only retain about 5-10% of what you learnt (I'm generalising here, obviously not true for all degrees e.g. medicine, health science professions etc).
6. That for most jobs, it usually doesn't really matter what degree you did as long as it's somewhat related to your employment (again, generalising here), since you need to learn from scratch anyway once you start your job. Your job experience, passion for the role/industry, and ability to learn quickly are far more critical qualities that employers look for.
7. It's not what you know. It's who you know.
I try to remind all my students of this, hopefully taking some stress/pressure off of them as it really puts the HSC into perspective.