Ragerunner
Your friendly HSC guide
As Ms 12 said, the relative differences between internal marks are still retained.
If you were 1 mark below the student ahead of you, your moderated assessment mark will remain very close.
An issue in the example you created DarkPrince_87, is in most cases it does not matter what HSC exam mark the student with 77 got.
If you got 88 in the HSC exam, the assessment mark you will get will correspond to your rank while taking account of the relative difference between each student.
You will not simply get that students mark. There are other students in the class as well.
e.g.
Student A gets 76 in school. 88 in the HSC exam (in your example)
Student B gets 77 in school. 76 in the HSC exam (in your example)
Lets pretend student A was ranked 2nd.
Lets pretend student B was ranked 1st.
Lets pretend there are 10 people in your class, and the HSC exam marks they got are as follows:
75, 76 (student B), 78, 82, 80, 85, 88 (student A), 89, 89, 90
Student B who was ranked first, receives 90 as his moderated assessment mark, and 76 as his HSC exam mark. Average = 83 (HSC Mark)
Student A is ranked second, who receives 89 as his moderated assessment mark (second highest HSC exam mark), and keeps his original HSC exam mark of 88. Hence his HSC mark is 89.
What you can see from this is, student B in no way affected student A in terms of his HSC exam performance. Student B received a 76, but had no effect on student A.
If you were 1 mark below the student ahead of you, your moderated assessment mark will remain very close.
An issue in the example you created DarkPrince_87, is in most cases it does not matter what HSC exam mark the student with 77 got.
If you got 88 in the HSC exam, the assessment mark you will get will correspond to your rank while taking account of the relative difference between each student.
You will not simply get that students mark. There are other students in the class as well.
e.g.
Student A gets 76 in school. 88 in the HSC exam (in your example)
Student B gets 77 in school. 76 in the HSC exam (in your example)
Lets pretend student A was ranked 2nd.
Lets pretend student B was ranked 1st.
Lets pretend there are 10 people in your class, and the HSC exam marks they got are as follows:
75, 76 (student B), 78, 82, 80, 85, 88 (student A), 89, 89, 90
Student B who was ranked first, receives 90 as his moderated assessment mark, and 76 as his HSC exam mark. Average = 83 (HSC Mark)
Student A is ranked second, who receives 89 as his moderated assessment mark (second highest HSC exam mark), and keeps his original HSC exam mark of 88. Hence his HSC mark is 89.
What you can see from this is, student B in no way affected student A in terms of his HSC exam performance. Student B received a 76, but had no effect on student A.
Last edited: