In my situation, I am tentatively trying to get a state rank for chemistry (other subjects if possible, this one slightly more probable based on standard deviations haha), and I am wondering how important the raw internal mark is for determining state ranks... my school generally has quite difficult internal assessments for sciences (average for tasks always a fail with a few students doing alright clustered at the top and many below), so I am worried that my raw average not appearing high enough might decrease the chances of a sr, even though my standard deviation and average is relatively strong compared to the cohort of my partially selective school (not very highly ranked, but not low ranked school either) (I am 1st at the end of internals, raw average of 87-88, average is ~15% above rank 2 in a chemistry cohort of 70 students)
Or is the impact of the internal on this purely based on rank/standard deviations? If so, is this sufficient (provided the external mark is good enough, raw 96+ seems doable at this point, but who knows what will come up) for a sr? Thanks, and apologies if there is no good answer for this considering nesa doesn't release exactly how they do it (or if I am just missing something behind one or two google searches )))
Or is the impact of the internal on this purely based on rank/standard deviations? If so, is this sufficient (provided the external mark is good enough, raw 96+ seems doable at this point, but who knows what will come up) for a sr? Thanks, and apologies if there is no good answer for this considering nesa doesn't release exactly how they do it (or if I am just missing something behind one or two google searches )))