Nonetheless, a lot of parents are still going to attempt to persuade you to make decisions to their liking. If you acquiesce then they'll make your decisions for you. If you don't act on their advice, then you'll be considered a rebel - it's a lose-lose situation.Gough Whitlam said:Buttom line: It's your HSC, you will sit for the exam, your future, NOT your parents.
On that note, I'm considering dropping Ext 1 English - I loathe Ext 1 English as much you loathe maths - in all honesty, I'd rather have 6 periods of MX2 in one day than just one period of Ext 1 Eng...glycerine said:ergh i just decided to drop a subject and apparently i need a parental letter. i was like wtf i'm nearly 18 it's my decision what subjects i do for my hsc. it's not a big deal because mum will write it and all, i just think it's kind of ridiculous by yr 12.
addendum: 9 periods of maths? yuckk. then again last yr i had one week with 8 english periods and one with 10.
Agreed.... look not to put any of the lil yr 10 people down but if u plan on doing the HSC, the SC is worth about as much as the toilet paper you wipe your young bumz with :\... I wouldnt base my subject choice on the SC.Kao said:Big difference between the standard of SC maths and Ext1 maths
I agree with the people who say you shouldn't be doing 3u if you don't like it. I'm only doing advanced 2u but even that requires a decent amount of consistent work to do well. A ton of really smart people moved into my class from the extension class throughout last year because they couldn't deal with the excesses of work that they got in 3u.
I don't think it's a matter of stupidity.natstar said:IMO, if you let ur parents choose ur subjects, you are stupid.
I would partially disagree with your final statement. Whilst parents may not directly force their children into Law/Med etc as they used to, a lot of students feel the obligation to carry out their parents' wishes (as I said above). Sometimes students feel as if they are failing their parents by not fulfilling the "dream" their parents had for them. There are still many students who choose Law/Med merely for the status as opposed to enjoying the course/career.Dreamerish*~ said:exactly! if parents make their child choose something that the child is obviously not going to enjoy - therefore not do well in, then everyone will end up disappointed.
you do best what you're genuinely interested in. but i think most parents don't force their kids to do medicine/law etc anymore..