BackCountrySnow
Active Member
they sell hot dogs at kfc?Omnidragon said:UAI obviously has nothing to do with success. Most people I know with good UAIs end up selling hot dogs at KFC.
they sell hot dogs at kfc?Omnidragon said:UAI obviously has nothing to do with success. Most people I know with good UAIs end up selling hot dogs at KFC.
then that decieves the whole purpose of doing the hsc. the hsc is meant to rank students in accordance to an academic system aimed to balance and scale all subjects to reduce biases.fat fung said:but i seriously dont think unis should purely pick out ppl with higher uai b4 they show they got an aptitude to the course
You shouldn't be doing law. Apart from some (i hope) glaring spelling 'typos' your grammar is found lacking.Cookie182 said:I don't really think there is any empirical way of correlating the statement, even though I am in general agreeance with it. No current statistical data exists which tracks the university performance of HSC students, which would allow us to make comparisons. And then there is the problem of relative course difficultness. However, the specific statement can not be answerd simply because at it's core it asks for subjective reasoning- there is no objective and thorough definition of 'success'. Perhaps as it was noted earlier, completion would be the better phrase.
Ignoring university, a debate which ive seen on here many a times before has been is there really any difference purely between intelligence and UAI's. Obviously, with 50 and 99 it is a better bet that the person has a harder work ethic etc and is MOST likely smarter. However, what about 97 and 99. If the person who got 99 just has a strong memory and aced say modern/ancient history ie HSC marks of 99 and maintained low 90's in other 'easier' subjects and the person who got 97 did 4 Unit maths, physics but didn't score as high, there is definately a chance that they can be more intelliget then the person who got 99.
Hence, as law is mentioned a lot. Law at UOW for eg has a cutoff of 90, with people getting on 87+. It is not uncommon that kids who are very strong at comprehension and writing and who have a UAI in high 80's can beat kids who scored 99, usually because the 99 kid lacks interest and may have trouble adjusting to the more 'free-thinking' approach as opposed to them choosing and aceing maths/physics subjecs but then choosing Law for the prestige.
To truley mesaure this, we would have to eliminate these outlying events and make the assumption that everyone is rational in their course selection, has perfect course knowledge and enters into the course they truly do preference over anyhing else (ignoring influences, prestige etc etc). That way, kids who were very bright and math aces would choose prob engineering and hence would not cause these discrepancies by entering say Law. This is all based on generalisation, but if two kids DID share the same academic interests, ie the 87 UAI kid above and now a 99 UAI kid who was also interested in written areas- aced 4 U English, History Extension, Modern, Legal, Latin etc etc then i think its fair to say the 99 UAI kid would fair better, on average, over the course of the tertiary cycle.
OwtchBobness said:You shouldn't be doing law. Apart from some (i hope) glaring spelling 'typos' your grammar is found lacking.).
Is it really? I've had a look at some of my friend's law assignments (yes I'm sick) and they don't present as particually mathy, though certainly tedious.Bobness said:Also, those students who are accomplished at mathematics should not be thought of as 'less worthy' than those who are accomplished at humanities in the context of law. Maths / science gurus generally possess strong logic which would be very beneficial when following certain legal arguments. Might i draw your attention to our current HCA CJ Robert French who was a BSci / LLB graduate from UWA?
Bobness said:You shouldn't be doing law. Apart from some (i hope) glaring spelling 'typos' your grammar is found lacking.
Also does your 97uai vs 99uai come from a personal space of resentment? I know you scored 97.XX as our NSW uai and i think you make several essentialist and frankly misinformed judgments in your remark.
Firstly, modern and ancient history are not 'easier' subjects. I would argue that to score 99 in either subject (or both) would be much more difficult than scoring a 97 in extension two maths; yet in terms of 'scaling' the latter would count more towards your UAI (citation: the UAC documents).
Also, those students who are accomplished at mathematics should not be thought of as 'less worthy' than those who are accomplished at humanities in the context of law. Maths / science gurus generally possess strong logic which would be very beneficial when following certain legal arguments. Might i draw your attention to our current HCA CJ Robert French who was a BSci / LLB graduate from UWA?
Quod erat demonstratum.
***
In other news, KFunk wins thread.
Yeah they sell hot dogs at KFC (btw Omnidragon is just taking the piss).
He didn't say anything about law assignments being mathematical. He meant it in terms of critical thinking/logic.cannibal.horse said:Owtch
Is it really? I've had a look at some of my friend's law assignments (yes I'm sick) and they don't present as particually mathy, though certainly tedious.
I always took the 'maths helps with law' comment to be a misconception perpetuated by law students trying to justify why they put up with two years of extension maths
i tried to set up a hot dog stand in kfc once, but they evicted meBackCountrySnow said:they sell hot dogs at kfc?
Well, I learned a lot about you from just two posts-Bobness said:HAHAHA nah that's cool. I used backspace for the 'your' uai and it looks out of place now
However, it's quite common to use the lower case 'i' in formal internet correspondence. The guy has no refute now, though (since you picked it up first).
In other news, this uhawww character deserves to study law (even if he doesn't want to) more so than a cookie-cutter poster. His english is impeccable
There is no problem as long as noone makes bogus statements or abuses statistics. A higher UAI predicts a greater likelihood of success (under some definition of success). It does not ensure success. Nor does it dictate some upper limit to one's possible achievements. If all one claims is weak - moderate correlation then you would expect that observed differences in performance may well break down at small intervals. E.g. I would not expect any significant difference at the .05 UAI level (much as you would not expect differences in rates of stroke at a 1mmHg difference in blood pressure [though with a rediculous sample size you never know...]).Cookie182 said:KFunk's statistics would give light to this. However, the closer the two student's UAI's, the lesser in my opinion this difference would be.
Exactly. Well said, and i love the medical referenceKFunk said:There is no problem as long as noone makes bogus statements or abuses statistics. A higher UAI predicts a greater likelihood of success (under some definition of success). It does not ensure success. Nor does it dictate some upper limit to one's possible achievements. If all one claims is weak - moderate correlation then you would expect that observed differences in performance may well break down at small intervals. E.g. I would not expect any significant difference at the .05 UAI level (much as you would not expect differences in rates of stroke at a 1mmHg difference in blood pressure [though with a rediculous sample size you never know...]).
i know i know~~~wrong_turn said:then that decieves the whole purpose of doing the hsc. the hsc is meant to rank students in accordance to an academic system aimed to balance and scale all subjects to reduce biases.
those who earn their uai should be able to gain entry into any degree that their uai permits. they earned it, so they should be able to pick and choose for their effort. sure enough they may not have interest in it. and sure enough there is the common argument that they will choose a degree which matches their uai to "not waste" their uai. but why shouldnt they be able to do that?
Cookie182 said:Well, I learned a lot about you from just two posts-
Looks like i touched a nerve? You do realise that the 'no refute' comment is intensely sarcastically? I'm not sure, did you miss the emoticon ?Cookie182 said:1) You know how to use basic html coding, as do the majority of members.
2) Your a pompous arsehole, with a lack of comprehension skills. Actually it is quite surprising, given your choice of degree.
I have no 'refute now'? So unlike you, I'm not allowed to make some ridiculous excuse for a lack of what? English skills?
While i would agree that you did make some typos, your grammar was actually quite atrocious (and i am not using it as a barometer of intelligence, rather just the fact that your points could be clearer THAT IS ALL). For eg 'agreeance' and 'difficultness' are neologisms and you misused it's/its and then/than. Please look at your post again if you must, i was not having a go at you, but i was criticising its content. You 'my friend' have resorted to ad hominem, and i may be jumping the gun, but you're probably a very reactive person irl if this is your response on the internet.Cookie182 said:I think it's quite obvious that I made "typos". After all, the emphasis of my post was on the original statement being discussed. What was yours? How good you are at dissecting a post based on its grammar? Well, your first paragraph was certainly okay. However, it quickly went downhill after that. Statements such as "our UAI" lol. Now that my friend ain't a typo.
Cookie182 said:One minute you’re defending the difficulty of humanities subjects against mathematics than your accusing me of making out mathematical students in law are "less worthy". Having achieved a HSC mark of 98 in Ancient History, I can tell you that mathematics extension 2 is far harder!!
I actually agree with your second point, in regards to how some mathematics gurus may not do well in law if they are not motivated. Notice the conditionals? Your last post (i won't quote it again, but it is on the previous page) was ESSENTIALIST - that was my point. Whether it was because i could not quite understand your point due to miniscule details of grammar, or because something was 'lost in translation': that was the reason behind why i stated humanities in the HSC are more difficult than what people give it credit for, and being mathematics-inclined would not preclude you from being a high achiever in tertiary law. Two different points, they aren't contradictory.Cookie182 said:The only point I was making in regards to mathematics, was that students who are that way inclined and end up with high UAI's may choose courses like law. This may not be out of interest, but based on other factors such as prestige. Hence, their performance may not be as high relative to an interested student who achieved a lower UAI. This would give the 'relative' opinion that a higher UAI does not really correlate to greater performance.
I don't know why you should be proud that you 'made grammatical errors' as i would assume that it would be quite beneficial in legal studies? If you weren't 'sad enough to care' why post such a lengthy, meandering spiel - i most certainly got lost amongst your argument and personal attacks in the post.Cookie182 said:Without doubt you’re the type of person with a lot of spare time and an even bigger ego. I most likely made grammatical errors; in fact I hope I did. It will give you yet another chance to reveal how much of a dickhead you are. See, unlike you, I'm not sad enough to care. It's the internet, and as long as it meets a basic standard of legibility then it's good enough for me.
Child A: "You have cooties Cookie!!!!!!!!!"Cookie182 said:If your unable to understand what was said, then I think you should seriously re-consider your ability to study law
If you're going to try and have an e-fight, get those little things right.Cookie182 said:2) You're a pompous arsehole, with a lack of comprehension skills. Actually it is quite surprising, given your choice of degree.
No arguement there. In fact, even though it may appear weak I am withdrawing before I get completely destroyedAsyLum said:If you're going to try and have an e-fight, get those little things right.
Bobness said:For eg 'agreeance' and 'difficultness' are neologisms and you misused it's/its and then/than. [/COLOR]Please look at your post again if you must, i was not having a go at you, but i was criticising its content. You 'my friend' have resorted to ad hominem, and i may be jumping the gun, but you're probably a very reactive person irl if this is your response on the internet
I fucking hate teachers.cannibal.horse said:My parents (who are teachers) know kids with low UAIs are dumbshits.
My Dad does this hell funny thing every year. He always gets a dumbshit standard english class who have put in no work all year and muck around. So some 2 weeks before school ends and they start getting really nervous he says 'look, just knuckle down and pay attention in class and I'll get you a pass' - they do and end up getting a 55 for english, but what they don't realise is the marking basically starts at 50.
Once he had this kid come up to him on the playground, give him the bird and say 'fuck you sir, I didn't pay attention all year and I got a 53!'
Dad replies 'well done'