http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/hsc-results/determining-achievement.htmlwhats the difference between unweighted and weighted raw mark
nah it was 80-82 this year for a b6.Depends on what you are aiming for. Most people would consider a band 6 to be a very good mark, which is about a 70-75 raw in the HSC exam. It's because markers tend to be very picky about your answers, and the room for error is quite high. Also, there tends to be a lot of application of the concepts rather than sheer regurgitation, which adds even more depth to an already difficult subject.
they are all listed here, http://rawmarks.info/Do u have another table like that for math Ext 1?
most languages that aren't 'beginners' are some of the best scaling subjects you can do.whoa i didn't know jap continuers scaled that well, i always thought it scaled shit (but chose it anyways XD)
But that guy (me) did shipwrecks - the option that shipwrek'd everyone with their st00pid 7 markerf33ls when you get 90 raw and the guy that gets 89 gets a better weighed raw mark.
There's a difference between scaling and aligning. What you see in that table is how subjects are *aligned* (so like, raw mark into HSC mark). Scaling is somewhat involved in converting HSC mark into aggregate (the thing that is directly involved in ATAR)whoa i didn't know jap continuers scaled that well, i always thought it scaled shit (but chose it anyways XD)
This is not exactly true. Beginners courses are, generally, very good scaling courses.most languages that aren't 'beginners' are some of the best scaling subjects you can do.
tf is a weighted raw mark and non weighted raw mark?