neo o
it's coming to me...
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2002
- Messages
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- HSC
- 2004
I prefer to take the moral high ground .Originally posted by santaslayer
:rofl:
*waits anxiously for comeback*
I prefer to take the moral high ground .Originally posted by santaslayer
:rofl:
*waits anxiously for comeback*
...aah, the joys of attending a uni that doesnt bell curve the marks...Originally posted by Generator
Yes, it is very annoying when you have a mid D average throughout the regular semester only to find that an exam worth 15% (and the bell curve, I guess) dragged the mark down to a seventy bloody four.
im not sure about the other unis, but i know newcastle uni does not use the bell curve, no matter how many students are in the course.Originally posted by mic
how many ppl do you need in a course before they use the bell curve? cos isn't it hard if there's say 20 something ppl doing a course to use it?
haha never knew they teach u stuff like that in 171Originally posted by flyin'
Okay, the "Bell Curve" is what education-people call the "Normal Distribution", the proper statistical terminology. It can be shown (through the Central Limit Theorem) that if you have large numbers, that your data will be approximately normally distributed, that is, have a so-called Bell Curve.
So even if the university says, we don't use a Bell Curve and we can pass everyone, it doesn't necessary mean the marks distributed won't be like that of a Bell Curve.
Marks generally don't follow a Bell Curve when there are small numbers taking a certain unit. But if you have a unit, where you have 1000 students taking the course, you can almost bet your bottom dollar that the marks will appear like a Bell Curve.
Why this might be intuitively obvious? You'll have students who will work like stupid, people who will cram and do some work, and those who'll drink and party and do no work. There aren't many who will work like stupid, just as there won't be many who'll do nothing. They're on the tails. The rest will achieve marks in the middle.
yep i dont think it was that much work, i came from getting a crappy 74UAI and then got a destinction average at UWS, and i really didnt have to work that hard for it.. I am at uts now and sitting on a creit average, but after this semester it should go up a bitOriginally posted by Lazarus
You generally need to be in at least the top 35% to get a distinction, and usually the top 25%.
Varies between faculties, though. A distinction average is meant to be the equivalent of a UAI of 96. Personally I think the distinction average requires less work. Or maybe we're just 'better' once we reach uni. *shrugs*
I agree on that on the sole basis that English is compulsory. For parity on this matter, they should of atleast made mathematics compulsory too, or more appealingly, made English compulsory, but not compulsory for calculation of the Universities Admissions Index.Originally posted by tactic
haha, i think the HSC is an unfair assessment of your skills..
Well, the theory behind it was from Stat272 Probability.Originally posted by Minai
Good to see that 1st year statistics is of some benefit, flyin'
(for me anyway, I actually understood all that)
As above, this was motivated by Stat272. However, you should be able to understand it even with 170 knowledge.Originally posted by ...
haha never knew they teach u stuff like that in 171
i thought it was all 170 mofo
YOu have to remember that your doing what your good at/stuff u like... YOu will always do better than at school cause your forced to do stuff you dont want to do (i.e English)Originally posted by tactic
yep i dont think it was that much work, i came from getting a crappy 74UAI and then got a destinction average at UWS, and i really didnt have to work that hard for it.. I am at uts now and sitting on a creit average, but after this semester it should go up a bit