you can see who votedDamn, this sucks. I thought I made it so we can see who votes for what...Delete thread and remake it ?
Stop making me feel like a noob!you can see who voted
click on the number of votes and it shows who did
Hash tag fizzy cyst
Physics is full of relentless rote learning sometimes little to do with the actual Physics course. Although this is similar to HSC Chemistry in a way, Physics is no better.Better?
They're fairly different, can you give me a scope for better? Ie more fun, more difficult, scales better, more appreciated by universities.
I don't think there's an overall better- but in terms of better hsc subject for the hsc, I found physics a better differentiator- while chemistry was all rote learning.
I thought Physics was understanding the concepts well, whereas Chemistry was more rote-learningPhysics is full of relentless rote learning sometimes little to do with the actual Physics course. Although this is similar to HSC Chemistry in a way, Physics is no better.
HSC Physics is a horrible subject
In terms of contribution to humanity overall, it is difficult to compare both as they both work hand in hand to produce what we have today in terms of engineering and communications
Although Physics may play a more central role in these areas, most definitely Chemistry helps industrialise it, produce it and create a medium for which the Physics occurs in.
My vote is based on the fact that I enjoyed the Chemistry course much more than the Physics course since the Physics course is really limited to be honest
Oh really? because there wasn't any maths involved? Personally I can't judge which HSC subject is better because I didn't do Chemistry. However, HSC physics is not a horrible subject - it gives students a taste of modern Physics and it relies on understanding more than rote-learning even though the maths is elementary. Sure, the course is rote-learnable, but that requires effort, and the easy way to learn the course is through understanding. Personally, I loved HSC physics because it was a low effort subject that was rewarding at the same time and really does explore the wonders of modern physics in a way that other overseas syllabuses don't.Physics is full of relentless rote learning sometimes little to do with the actual Physics course. Although this is similar to HSC Chemistry in a way, Physics is no better.
HSC Physics is a horrible subject
In terms of contribution to humanity overall, it is difficult to compare both as they both work hand in hand to produce what we have today in terms of engineering and communications
Although Physics may play a more central role in these areas, most definitely Chemistry helps industrialise it, produce it and create a medium for which the Physics occurs in.
My vote is based on the fact that I enjoyed the Chemistry course much more than the Physics course since the Physics course is really limited to be honest
I disagree, I barely rote learn physics. It is a subject which can be predominantly understood imo.Physics is full of relentless rote learning sometimes little to do with the actual Physics course. Although this is similar to HSC Chemistry in a way, Physics is no better.
HSC Physics is a horrible subject
In terms of contribution to humanity overall, it is difficult to compare both as they both work hand in hand to produce what we have today in terms of engineering and communications
Although Physics may play a more central role in these areas, most definitely Chemistry helps industrialise it, produce it and create a medium for which the Physics occurs in.
My vote is based on the fact that I enjoyed the Chemistry course much more than the Physics course since the Physics course is really limited to be honest
We have students who are trying to understand relativity yet they cannot even for the life of them calculate rate of motion in resisted medium due to the limitations of this courseOh really? because there wasn't any maths involved? Personally I can't judge which HSC subject is better because I didn't do Chemistry. However, HSC physics is not a horrible subject - it gives students a taste of modern Physics and it relies on understanding more than rote-learning even though the maths is elementary. Sure, the course is rote-learnable, but that requires effort, and the easy way to learn the course is through understanding. Personally, I loved HSC physics because it was a low effort subject that was rewarding at the same time and really does explore the wonders of modern physics in a way that other overseas syllabuses don't.
Physics: do you understand why something works like this?We have students who are trying to understand relativity yet they cannot even for the life of them calculate rate of motion in resisted medium due to the limitations of this course
I'm not saying Chemistry is great, but rather they are on similar levels of rote learning and such.
The syllabus is full of 'societal impacts', and so is the Chemistry course, there are 'understanding' elements to both courses at a relatively same rate.
Both courses contain repetitive calculations with little to any maths, only arithmetic, one can easily rote learn the 'type' of questions they ask and just go on from there.
I should probably fix my statement and say that HSC Physics and HSC Chemistry are both horrible courses.
Maybe its the fact that I know less of 'real Chemistry', is the reason I'm less frustrated over it.
'Discuss the impact of the development of transformers on society'Physics: do you understand why something works like this?
Chemistry: can you remember the structure, properties, industrial uses, industrial sources, societal impact and history of 32 different things? Whoever can remember the most wins- the closer your answer is to exactly what was written in the prescribed textbook the better!