Er heisst Stefan. don't know why i remember that but hey.Teh Duke said:The multiple choice question was what the title should be.
"D" was "______ muss weg" (I can't remember the guys name)
For 12 and 13 I did the 50 Euros one and the community service one.
You shouldn't be allowed to do German Continuers. Pisses me off. Native speakers make the whole process unfair and undermine the whole point of the HSC.rumpnv said:Er heisst Stefan. don't know why i remember that but hey.
How many of you guys are actually german? Cos i thought at the speaking there were a lot of native speakers, cos i am ( came hare when i was 4 though so it doens't reeli count)
Anyway yeah my mum read over the reading and repsonding bit and was like this was written by someone english cos she said there were things in there that a german wouldn't say "konstituiert" for example. She thought it was a bit odd, but i think i covered most of what they wanted me to
When you replied to the "campingtrip" one what kind of voice did u use for the representative student ( cos i was like yeah thanks or letting us go, but there are some improvements to be made if this is to be done another year etc)
Anyway sorry about the epic novel
Nani
then why is there a chinese and korean and other background speaker courses? isnt that a tad unfair for them then?Cerry said:^ ... and it's not really fair to tell them that they can't study a langauge because their family speaks it.
Because there's enough background speakers in the state to make up a course. What would be unfair is the BOS saying "Oh, you're a German background speaker. We don't have enough of you for a course, but you speak German as one of your main languages, so you can't use your ability to your advantage in your HSC like everyone else." Also, as a general rule, the HSC German background speakers are more likely to have parents who speak English with them at home than the Asian background speakers.xxstef said:then why is there a chinese and korean and other background speaker courses? isnt that a tad unfair for them then?
Yeah. Except there are rules against allowing native speakers into German Continuers. Unless you lied on the form, you shouldn't be doing the course if your parents speak the language.Cerry said:^ There's not enough native speakers in the state to warrant their own course, and it's not really fair to tell them that they can't study a langauge because their family speaks it. Besides, it's like us sitting an English exam - we screw stuff up (how many times have you gotten back an English essay with spelling corrections, or a comment about a split infinitive or something?), because we just spout stuff without thinking. It's the same for the German speakers, where as we're much more likely to go through and look for things like incorrect sentence structure in our extended responses.
Also, they don't even necessarily have an advantage. My teacher grew up in Germany, as did her husband, and she has two kids, who have both lived in Germany at various points. The kids both speak Schwaebisch, which is a dialect from South-Western Germany, and is therefore not acceptable German according to the BOS. They do speak Hoch-Deutsch, but you don't always realise that you're speaking a dialect until someone else doesn't understand you. And her son couldn't do an adjectival endings worksheet if his life depended on it, because he just does the endings as they sound right, rather than actually knowing that something is in this case, and therefore has this ending.
Where does the BOS document this rule? I've never seen anything suggesting that that's the rule before. They do a really shit job of policing it too, because off the top of my head, I can think of at least 5 people who I know that have broken it for various languages, and one of them had just immigrated to Australia from Germany. The BOS may be stupid at times, but you think that they'd notice such an obvious breach of their rules.alexdore993 said:Yeah. Except there are rules against allowing native speakers into German Continuers. Unless you lied on the form, you shouldn't be doing the course if your parents speak the language.
I have to compete with you, and it really makes me angry. How should us non-native speakers be expected to compete with people that speak the language at home?
For EUROPEAN languages it isnt a rule - you can do German Continuers even if you're a native speaker...it's only when there are alternatives available for native speakers that they have to do that. The only subjects native speakers can't do is a beginners language course (unless there is a proviso for native speakers course)alexdore993 said:Yeah. Except there are rules against allowing native speakers into German Continuers. Unless you lied on the form, you shouldn't be doing the course if your parents speak the language.
Unfortunately, that's false . German scales badly (don't get me wrong I'm doing Continuers + Extension for year 12). I absolutely love doing German and I want to do it in uni but the scaling really pisses me off. Doesn't realistically reflect the effort needed. Last year, a 91 went down to 79 after scalingCerry said:and German, as a general rule, scales pretty damn well, which means it can't be having an adverse effect.
Source of this? I heard last year it didn't scale so well, but usually it scales quite highly, so maybe it was just an off year...Borbor said:Unfortunately, that's false . German scales badly (don't get me wrong I'm doing Continuers + Extension for year 12). I absolutely love doing German and I want to do it in uni but the scaling really pisses me off. Doesn't realistically reflect the effort needed. Last year, a 91 went down to 79 after scaling
Shit happens.