Year 8-11 Selective Result Discussion (3 Viewers)

aaliya

Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2023
Messages
71
Gender
Female
HSC
2028
get some random preparation books from five senses (found in north rocks and seven hills) for the year youre trying for entry to, which in your case is year 9. also go on the acer website and purchase the hast past papers, those helped me asw. as for the math section, i recommend a specific author called yvonne kang, he does educational books for year 6 selective, but thatll still help because u can time yourself at half the normal time for a normal year 6 test in the book to get ready for year 9 hast, thats what i did. so for example, for a normal year 9 hast practice test for 30 questions you would time yourself 35 minutes (for example) but for the year 6 selective test you would time yourself at 17-20 mins. this will also help with time management, and i was actually surprised to find out that year 6 selective and year 9 hast are not actually that far apart, they both have the same foundational math topics that structure the math test. also, be ready for 1-3 science questions in the math test, these wont be completely science but theyll be a combination of math+science and those are actually harder than the normal math question in the test. i didnt particular study for the science questions because nobody knew they were gonna be there, but even if you get them wrong its not that devastating cos its only 1-3 questions and most of it should be the same math topic. as for tips and tricks, farm as many extracurricular+external academic achievements as you can. stuff like premiers reading challenge, premiers sporting challenge, math olympiad and australian math comp will all help, as long as you get a cert for it. as for tips and tricks for the exam itself, just dont stress too much and think casually about it, as if youre doing a normal school test, itll help you a lot. if im being honest, in the break that separates the 4 exams me and my friends just ran around the school calling each other names and finding the toilets. sounds really immature, but at the end it helped us to cool down, recharge and calm ourselves down before the next part of hast. obv this is just an example, so just do whatever helps you to calm yourselves down. this will also help in time management. as for writing, most of the prompts are pretty basic, theyre just looking for students who would have a unique+creative perspective on the text compared to normal students, but dont stress abt it that much, because you also have to manage ur time a lot in writing so as long as you give a piece that you think is done to the best of your extent it should be fine, just try to sprinkle in some uniqueness and creativity (also imo planning at the start is overrated and a waste of time so if you can learn how to plan as you go that woud be better, but thats up to you). as for english, this would be (imo) the hardest exam out of all. the comprehension questions are abstract, to say the least, and you need to comprehend, understand and attempt each question with a clear mind, as you dont have to manage time as much cos u do get a good amount of time. read back on the text for the slightest bit of clues, because most of the questions youalso, make sure to eat a breakfast with foods that sharpen your brain, like fruits (u can google foods like this). also you can take these foods in break. also, i realised that you have the same hsc year as me, and year 9 entry has already ended, so do you mean year 10 entry? if so, replace all the year 9s in this text with year 10 lmao (god i yap too much)
ya i am doing yr 10 entry next yr n for the this part - in the yr 9 girra exam - i said that since i am doing the exam in yr 9 not for yr 9 entry, sorry for the confusion. thanks for the most detailed response @DaMinion i have ever seen, it helped me a lot (it's alr i yap a lot too)
 

Slayon

New Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2024
Messages
22
Location
brat summer
Gender
Male
HSC
2027
Does anyone know if notesedu is good for hast prep? If so, do I buy the year 10 one if I’m taking the test for year 10 entry???
what's schools r u applying for, do u mind sending me some resources pls? ty
 

xyyvii

New Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2024
Messages
26
Location
The void
Gender
Female
HSC
2028
what's schools r u applying for, do u mind sending me some resources pls? ty
I’m not too sure about any schools I’m applying for yet (although sgghs is def one of the schools I’m applying for), would like to apply for Hornsby or hurlstone though!!

Regarding resources, there’s a zip file of questions though I’m not too sure about whether it is useful for year 10 into 11 entry
 

DaMinion

Member
Joined
Aug 5, 2024
Messages
56
Gender
Male
HSC
2028
ya i am doing yr 10 entry next yr n for the this part - in the yr 9 girra exam - i said that since i am doing the exam in yr 9 not for yr 9 entry, sorry for the confusion. thanks for the most detailed response @DaMinion i have ever seen, it helped me a lot (it's alr i yap a lot too)
no worries gl, what schools you applying for?
 

20/50=80%

New Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2024
Messages
15
Gender
Female
HSC
2026
Does anyone know if notesedu is good for hast prep? If so, do I buy the year 10 one if I’m taking the test for year 10 entry???
notesedu is okay esp for abstract reasoning and writing but all the other ones arent rlly relevant to the hast. id still reccommend giving it a go but if the price is a problem dont bother
 

MeltingGlacier

New Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2023
Messages
26
Gender
Male
HSC
2026
Does anyone know if notesedu is good for hast prep? If so, do I buy the year 10 one if I’m taking the test for year 10 entry???
Adding onto what others have said, I've used notesedu and in my experience the reading comp and abstract reasoning were decent. Abstract reasoning was harder than the actual test in my opinion and Notesedu didn't provie that many question types. You could probably just do UCAT abstract reasoning. The reading comp was quite useful, especially in helping you skim through the text and just practicing how to answer they quickly although you could just find assorted reading comp questions online under timed conditions and mark them. The maths wasn't that relevant as close to none of the questions from notesedu were similar to the HAST ones. The HAST focused quite a lot on science and you just needed to understand how to apply the information provide in the question.
 

xyyvii

New Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2024
Messages
26
Location
The void
Gender
Female
HSC
2028
Adding onto what others have said, I've used notesedu and in my experience the reading comp and abstract reasoning were decent. Abstract reasoning was harder than the actual test in my opinion and Notesedu didn't provie that many question types. You could probably just do UCAT abstract reasoning. The reading comp was quite useful, especially in helping you skim through the text and just practicing how to answer they quickly although you could just find assorted reading comp questions online under timed conditions and mark them. The maths wasn't that relevant as close to none of the questions from notesedu were similar to the HAST ones. The HAST focused quite a lot on science and you just needed to understand how to apply the information provide in the question.
What would you recommend for the maths and writing part?
 

MeltingGlacier

New Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2023
Messages
26
Gender
Male
HSC
2026
What would you recommend for the maths and writing part?
I didn't really study for the maths part as I was already confident in my maths but you should be able to comprehend word problems and understand them. In a couple questions I had to construct equations but there was also geometry, statistics etc. For me the maths also had a lot of science so make sure you would want just know basic concepts. One question involved how objects behave in space and another question had the different types of energy. I think you just need critical thinking skills and being confident in applying what you're given. For writing, you should read exemplars for both discursives and creatives. Afterwards, you'll want to just practice writing them under timed conditions with prompts and reviewing how you can improve. I would recommend taking a couple minutes to plan your response as the quality and how it relates to the prompt is very important.
 

xyyvii

New Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2024
Messages
26
Location
The void
Gender
Female
HSC
2028
I didn't really study for the maths part as I was already confident in my maths but you should be able to comprehend word problems and understand them. In a couple questions I had to construct equations but there was also geometry, statistics etc. For me the maths also had a lot of science so make sure you would want just know basic concepts. One question involved how objects behave in space and another question had the different types of energy. I think you just need critical thinking skills and being confident in applying what you're given. For writing, you should read exemplars for both discursives and creatives. Afterwards, you'll want to just practice writing them under timed conditions with prompts and reviewing how you can improve. I would recommend taking a couple minutes to plan your response as the quality and how it relates to the prompt is very important.
Do you know where to find prompts that provide both creative and discursive?
 

MeltingGlacier

New Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2023
Messages
26
Gender
Male
HSC
2026
Do you know where to find prompts that provide both creative and discursive?
You could just search up creative prompts and for discursive, you could use persuasive prompts and try to write in a discursive style. In a previous year, one of my friends wrote a discursive and got really high marks while another one got average marks for a persuasive so its usually better to write in a discursive style, even if given a persuasive prompt. Usually it's a phrase not a direct question asking you to choose a "side". e.g. Is all gossip bad? Instead of focusing on one side of the argument, it would be better to explore the topic in whatever way suits it since there's not really a definitive way to write a discursive. Any tone or structure works and its usually better to do it in a creative way, incorporating anecdotes and an unorthodox writing style. I'll pm you a link for discursive/persuasive prompts as idk if I'm allowed to post links here
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 3)

Top