Gregor Samsa
That Guy
A friend of mine managed to get 94.15 with no Band 6 marks, the marks ranging from 72 (English Extension 1, converted) to 89 (PD/H/PE). .. Most of these marks were Band 5.
wowOriginally posted by Gregor Samsa
A friend of mine managed to get 94.15 with no Band 6 marks, the marks ranging from 72 (English Extension 1, converted) to 89 (PD/H/PE). .. Most of these marks were Band 5.
but BOS has nothing to do with scaling.....Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
What infuriates me more, is that ESL gets more scaling than standard END RANT
Wrong Minai, you don't see my point. Firstly, you only need very basic mathematics for vet and med, but if you want the UAI required for those courses, you gotta do 2/3 or 3/4 unit maths/english - otherwise in a lot of cases your UAI won't be high enough.Originally posted by Minai
Well if I were to do Med/Vet, I wouldve done sciences/advanced english/4 unit maths, and for Law and Actuaries, it'd make sense to do economics/adv english/2+ unit maths....so i dun really see your point
on topic, a girl from my school last year got 97 with no band 6's (high 80's in 4u math, 3u math, adv english, chem, bio)
Thats a huge generalisation...u dont need to do those subjects to get a high UAI, u need to do well in the subjects u do to get a high UAI..Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Wrong Minai, you don't see my point. Firstly, you only need very basic mathematics for vet and med, but if you want the UAI required for those courses, you gotta do 2/3 or 3/4 unit maths/english - otherwise in a lot of cases your UAI won't be high enough.
UAC are also idiots (which I should've done earlier, fair enough) because it is they who judge a subject on its so-called difficulty and scale it poorly/well.
No, they don't. BOS (or its markers) use discretion in deciding band cutoffs and hence the "so-called difficulty" of a subject, but that has nothing to do with scaling. UAC uses no discretion, the scaling of a subject is determined purely mathermatically by the performance of its candidature across all their subjects. No-one at UAC "judges" a subject.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
UAC are also idiots because it is they who judge a subject on its so-called difficulty and scale it poorly/well.
What you are actually saying is "if you want a high UAI you have to take high level courses". You are, however, making a small error of logic. Correlation is not causation.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Basically, if you want Law/Med/Vet/Actuarials/etc...you have to do sciences/economics/advanced english/2/3/4 unit maths.
They were fairly 'hard' subjects.. No Ext.Maths though..Originally posted by iambored
wow
were the other subjects hard ones?
as that is really something, i wonder if some of these uais are totally screwed! including my own!
Seems like a nice guyOriginally posted by Newbie
the dux of maths said basically the same thing as you
he told me at the beginning of the year told me that only idiots drop science subjects and that i would get a crap uai.
Ugh, I'm wasted on you people. I am doing a lot of correlation to make my points, but it's only fair, because I'm speaking practically, not theoretically.Originally posted by Lazarus
[Edit: Excuse any repeated comments... some of you posted before I finished writing my reply.]
First, a few brief points -
1. Standard and Advanced English are scaled exactly the same. The scaled mean for the combined candidature has always been higher than that for ESL.
2. The aligning of marks has no effect on UAIs, because it is your raw marks that are used; not the marks given to you by the Board.
3. As Minai [and walla] said, scaling has nothing to do with the difficulty of a course. The scaling is determined by the quality of the candidature. It is not a subjective determination.
What you are actually saying is "if you want a high UAI you have to take high level courses". You are, however, making a small error of logic. Correlation is not causation.
Consider the type of student who generally takes high level courses. They'd usually be - at the very least - fairly intelligent, and very capable. Surely this is exactly the type of person who should be receiving a high UAI. Students who choose not to take high level courses are, more often than not, less 'academically inclined'. These students are exactly the type who would receive a lesser UAI.
I've seen the scaling algorithms. I can't understand how you can argue that they favour some courses over others.
As a sidenote, many universities take into account your HSC marks when making selections, and it is possible for you to receive an offer even if your UAI is too low. I have a friend who did particularly well in biology and was hence accepted into B Science (Advanced) at USYD even though her UAI was an entire point below the cut-off.
This is incorrect, and demonstrates a misunderstanding of the scaling statistics.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
I would like to bring to your attention that Industrial technology courses are scaled down from high forties to high thirties
Okay. Here we go.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Furthermore, let me just illustrate to you how unfair scaling is:
[reformatted by author - plus/minus indicates type of scaling]
My friend's marks:
1. Adv Eng 89 (+)
2. Ext Eng 48 (+)
3. Maths 92 (+)
4. Maths Ext 47 (+)
5. Economics 94 (+)
6. Ind Tech 95 (-)
His UAI = 97.85
My marks:
1. Adv Eng 93 (+)
2. Ext Eng 46 (+)
3. Maths 95 (+)
4. Maths Ext 47 (+)
5. Chemistry 90 (+)
6. Physics 91 (+)
My UAI = 99.10
Explain the justice in that?
Not really, my next door neighbour got 99.3 with Drama, Visual arts, 4u english and ancient history. She didn't even expect to get 90, what i nice surprise it must've been.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Basically, if you want Law/Med/Vet/Actuarials/etc...you have to do sciences/economics/advanced english/2/3/4 unit maths.
Ohhh... ur in for it now dude!Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Lazarus, I disagree...
I agree. Both sides will now be quoting each other, quoting other sources, and we'll end up with page-long posts.Originally posted by Dash
Ohhh... ur in for it now dude!
Originally posted by Lazarus
Okay. Here we go.
Let's try and make things clearer (again):
Otherwise we could go on forever.
Once again, scaling has nothing to do with the difficulty of a course. Whether the content of a course is "hard" or "easy" is irrelevant, and is never at any stage taken into account. Never.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
Lazarus, I disagree that there is a so called compensated balance between "hard" and "easy" subjects.
You are making the same mistake you were making when comparing aligned marks with scaled marks. The two are incomparable. In exactly the same way, you cannot compare percentiles betweeen courses. The 90th percentile in physics is not the same as the 90th percentile in industrial technology, unless the candidatures are exactly the same. This is not the case. Your comparisons are invalid.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
The data is right in front of you, yet you fail to see that my friend clearly did well in industrial tech. He was undoubtedly placed in a higher percentile than I for my corresponding subject (say phys or chem).
Okay... I'm happy to call it quits now.Originally posted by CHUDYMASTER
I guess the only way I can conclude is that the scaling system needs to be erased - forever.