jasminerulez
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- Feb 21, 2013
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I'm not sure if this question makes sense, lets say for mathematics I get a mark of 75, what would that approximately be aligned to ?
This is not scaling, it’s the alignment process. The “bands” correspond to performance descriptors e.g. band 4 = satisfactorily, band 6 = outstandingly etc, which may not line up with their allotted “marks” (b4 = 70-79 etc), so they align your raw marks to the performance scale. Let’s say in maths, someone who does the bare minimum to achieve the band 6 outcome gets 85 raw on the exam. NESA will align raw scores from 85-100 into the band 6 bracket of 90-100 (squeezing the range into the designated space).does that website only publish like the highest most appealing aligned marks because it seems like everything gets scaled up by SO MUCH
Also note that rawmarks.info is most useful for past HSC papers. If you get 75% on one of those, you’d be most likely to get a higher aligned mark in your HSC.I'm not sure if this question makes sense, lets say for mathematics I get a mark of 75, what would that approximately be aligned to ?
oH WHAT okay that makes a lot of sense cheersThis is not scaling, it’s the alignment process. The “bands” correspond to performance descriptors e.g. band 4 = satisfactorily, band 6 = outstandingly etc, which may not line up with their allotted “marks” (b4 = 70-79 etc), so they align your raw marks to the performance scale. Let’s say in maths, someone who does the bare minimum to achieve the band 6 outcome gets 85 raw on the exam. NESA will align raw scores from 85-100 into the band 6 bracket of 90-100 (squeezing the range into the designated space).
Usually, you can achieve the designated band descriptor with a lower mark (e.g. a raw 75 in Adv English shows pretty decent skills -> aligns to mid band 5 accordingly) thus the alignment is quite significant.