This is consistent with my point. If you were born in your country of origin and learned Arabic there then moved to Australia and took Arabic for your HSC, you would've noticed a considerable difference in difficulty (in a positive way that is). Regardless, I'm sure that all the effort and practice that you put throughout your senior years will not go in vain, and that you will definitely be happy with your result!
Yep! A significant number of those students attend the Secondary College of Languages (previously known as the Saturday School of Community Languages) which is very similar to the NSW School of Languages in the sense that it allows students to take a language subject not offered at their home school, although at the former, the language requested must be the student’s heritage/background community language, unlike the latter, where students can take any language subject that they wish, as long that they meet the general criteria specified by NESA. Another difference is that the Secondary College of Languages offers Arabic, whereas the NSW School of Languages does not. And yes, the number of francophone students taking French for the HSC is indeed lower than its equivalent number in terms of Arabic. This is possibly due to the Arabic-speaking community being larger than its francophone counterpart.
If your classmates chose not to continue studying Arabic due to its unfavourable scaling, then it is likely that they also find it difficult and would consequently find that it is not worth the effort. This is because the more favourable a student's performance is in a particular subject, the less significant the effect of scaling will be. Based on this, a link between the scaling and difficulty of a subject can be established. Take Mathematics Standard for example, it is not considered to be a high scaling subject, although favourable performance is definitely possible in this subject, and when this is the case, the effect of scaling will likely be negligible. This is the aspect that native speakers don't mind, as they know that their performance will be favourable despite the unfavourable scaling because to them, HSC Arabic is of lower difficulty.
Regarding Arabic Beginners, it has been suspended following the 2019 HSC examination because when the candidature of an HSC course falls below 15 for each of three consecutive years, the subject is suspended and this is why Arabic Beginners is not offered at your school:
Arabic is a very rich language, and it is definitely sad that not many non-natives attempt to take Arabic for the HSC. This is likely due to a number of factors:
- Arabic is one of the most difficult languages in the world (there are debates as to whether it is more difficult than Mandarin, which it is, in some aspects, although that is a different topic). This alone may discourage students thinking about choosing it for their HSC from doing so (especially non-natives).
- Significant difficulty for non-natives, in addition to rather unfavourable scaling, can only make matters worse for those thinking about taking Arabic for the HSC.
- Popularity is also an important factor (as mentioned above). Despite the fact that a language like Japanese uses three different writing systems (all of which share no similarity with English), one can notice an increase in the number of students taking Japanese for the HSC, which is highly likely due to the increasing popularity of anime. If the Arabic language had this popularity, there would have likely been an increase in the number of students (particularly non-natives) taking it for the HSC, despite its difficulty.
Indeed, most Extension language courses offer more favourable scaling as you mentioned.
That is definitely a possible reason as to why fewer people are taking language subjects for the HSC, although if we consider former HSC students like you and me, you took Economics and Business Studies which are relevant to what you intend to study and I took Business Studies which is also relevant to what I am currently studying, although this did not stop us from taking Arabic and French for our HSC.
.انه موضوع مثير للاهتمام بلا شك