just out of interest anyone who has done the hsc before, is doin the 3 sciences phy/chem/bio good? i mean do these subjects scale down or up and are they worth the scaling in terms of difficulty and amount of time spent studying in it? thanks..
physics and chem scale up quite a bit...angmor said:just out of interest anyone who has done the hsc before, is doin the 3 sciences phy/chem/bio good? i mean do these subjects scale down or up and are they worth the scaling in terms of difficulty and amount of time spent studying in it? thanks..
Use the Advanced Search tool.angmor said:but biology doesnt scale down right? i dont really understand how scaling works....is there a thread on this forum that will show you?
i don't do bio... but are u sure it's easier?Loz_metalhead said:Oh ok. Well Bio is much easier than chem..
First thing is first: if you choose solely based on scaling you will crash and burn. Now onto the rest, doing the maximum units load for science can be very satisfying as it gives you a nice and broad view of science as a whole(as much as the HSC can grant anyway) and there is even some crossover too - for instance a great deal of the sections on water in biology and chemistry are fairly similar, and you learn some similar concepts about molecular structures in physics and chemistry and so on.just out of interest anyone who has done the hsc before, is doin the 3 sciences phy/chem/bio good? i mean do these subjects scale down or up and are they worth the scaling in terms of difficulty and amount of time spent studying in it? thanks..
kami said:Hi! I did all three of the sciences for most of my studies till I dropped Physics after trials so I might be able to help you.
First thing is first: if you choose solely based on scaling you will crash and burn. Now onto the rest, doing the maximum units load for science can be very satisfying as it gives you a nice and broad view of science as a whole(as much as the HSC can grant anyway) and there is even some crossover too - for instance a great deal of the sections on water in biology and chemistry are fairly similar, and you learn some similar concepts about molecular structures in physics and chemistry and so on.
However it is also very limiting to do - what happens if you find you really aren't that scientific? You can't exactly drop 6 units and thus you are stuck with it, and the lesson here is - follow your passions, if you think to yourself "wow history or drama is cool but I suppose I should do this instead for my UAI etc." then you know you are making a mistake, so only choose the 3 sciences if you have a marked passion for science.
As far as how they scale compared to each other - Chemistry is the highest but the difference between it and Physics is rather tiny in the scheme of things and there is a moderate drop down to Biology. But as I've stated already, it isnt the scaling that is important; its your interest in the subject which will benefit your UAI.
I hope some of this helped you.
It's not anymore stressing than anything else I think - it just would really test your enjoyment of the subject as you would be doing the one style of subject almost constantly.angmor said:thanks! well it was really thoughtful of you to invest your time into this thread..,.is it really stressing to have all 3 sciences...i mean i do want to do something 'scientific' uni but now i think 3 sciences is a bit of overload.....shouldve dropped bio and done something easier like tourism or something...