betthisnameistaken
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2018
- Messages
- 8
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2020
So I've heard that if your cohort (in your school year) does better externally, everyone's internal marks (assessment mark) get "pulled up", which is why you should help people in your year.
However, I've also heard that the school you go to should not disadvantage/advantage the scaling/moderation of your internal marks (assessment mark), so that two students of the same skill should not have different internal marks because of the school they go to (if all the internal assessments and marking were exactly the same across both schools, the only difference being the performance of other students in the school).
So which is it?
The second explanation sounds much more fair, because theoretically your own marks should not be affected by how good/bad the other people in your school year are (which is mostly out of your control), and the purpose of moderation of internal marks is to make everything fair, isn't it? If the first explanation is true, then doesn't this greatly advantage people at selective/private schools, and greatly disadvantage people at non-selective schools, raising concerns about inequality?
Of course, going to a school with greater competition will make students work harder because of greater competition, versus if they are at a low-ranking school and have no competition, which can lead to laziness/complacency.
However, I've also heard that the school you go to should not disadvantage/advantage the scaling/moderation of your internal marks (assessment mark), so that two students of the same skill should not have different internal marks because of the school they go to (if all the internal assessments and marking were exactly the same across both schools, the only difference being the performance of other students in the school).
So which is it?
The second explanation sounds much more fair, because theoretically your own marks should not be affected by how good/bad the other people in your school year are (which is mostly out of your control), and the purpose of moderation of internal marks is to make everything fair, isn't it? If the first explanation is true, then doesn't this greatly advantage people at selective/private schools, and greatly disadvantage people at non-selective schools, raising concerns about inequality?
Of course, going to a school with greater competition will make students work harder because of greater competition, versus if they are at a low-ranking school and have no competition, which can lead to laziness/complacency.