ExtremelyBoredUser
Bored Uni Student
Any form of compulsion will be challenged/ignored as evident in people doing primary school maths. Heavy stigma of Maths + Science being nerdy subjects/too hard to bother/useless here, not trying to sound cringe or anything but if you went to a public school you would know.1. Only mathsx2 is similar-ish. Oh ye also, for mx2 we should be trying to compare to JEE Advanced. ignore english for them, cuz second language.
If u look at chem/phys, that's where differences in difficulty becomes very obvious, especially with the cookie-cutter phys we do. Look at JEE Advanced chem/phys lmfao.
2. Ye perhaps a bit glamorised.
3. University rankings are absolute bullshit. They depend on a variety of factors, including some arguably irrelevant and unfair metrics. Seoul National University students would absolutely smoke students at any uni in australia in STEM.
The last idea of 'over-exerting' is wrong. What should be argued is that we're on average clearly 'under-exerting' students, and we should reach some level of exertion somewhere in between HSC and other countries. By virtue of the HSC being so flexible in what subjects you choose, sacrifice is made, and students can opt for easy choices.
There is everything to be gained by raising the average education level.
Defining lives is pretty idiotic, but pragmatic. In Aus, where we have so many resources for so little people, we fortunately do not have to 'cull' as much. This allows us the luxury of having less selective tests, but nonetheless, this is not an excuse to under-educate the populace, and be less competitive globally.
Yes, the main problem is the culture of not putting in effort. Perhaps there is something to be gained from deleting standard subjects, and other easier subjects to force people to attempt harder ones.
Lower retention rates could be good, if balanced properly against increasing the average ability of the people who are retained.
Yes the lower years is an absolute problem. Primary schools should be improved. Teaching is way too lax in junior years. Science and maths should be properly introduced and taught to build solid fundamentals, from which Yr12 STEM can be made harder. I'm sure the sacrifice that comes with actually learning during junior years (if that is a sacrifice) can be made up for by the smoother transition.
Difficulty doesn't really matter because the majority of people who are already doing MX1/2 are already "committed" in the sense they're willing to "study seriously" + scaling
Dilemma IG is pulling people into maths/science without scaring them away while also preserving the challenge which makes it worthwhile in the first place and yeah its definitely just culture + early year education.
IDK if its a big thing but most of my public school friends have maths teachers/physics teachers without their respective backgrounds so there might be a BIO teacher teaching physics etc.
But yea just my thoughts aight gotta get back to phys prep XD