darkwolfzx
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i love this thread so much. The views are sky high
While I won't discount that memorisation plays a part, university learning and high school learning are substantially different, but this is dependent on which area of study you go to. I'd hedge a bet that the more structured degrees will possess more of a linear approach, whereas those with only coherencies as their path, will be substantially more lateral in their approach.wrong_turn said:everyone places an emphasis that the hsc is rubbish and that it is all about memorising essays. in many ways uni is similar and not too different from the hsc. it still requires memorisation, just that memorisation does not always get you top marks though it definately helps. uni requires a combination of intelligence for application of concepts and also memorisation of the theory for you to apply the concepts in the first place.
But as you have said, the people who achieve these type of 60UAI>HD GPA are more anomalies than the rule, but they do exist for several reasons.so no i do not agree that a person with a uai of 60 can succeed as much as the person with 99 if they were in the same course with the same cut-off. of course there will be anomalies, but like i said, the general scenario is that the high achievers will continue to be high achievers in an academic situation.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a sample of 400 students with UAIs ranging 95-100, and 400 students with UAIs ranging 75-80, with each group studying a comparable range of courses.patty4848 said:What's wrong with betting on both. Just because there is 39 UAI ranks between them, doesn't simply mean one will succeed 'more' and the other simply won't succeed. What's stopping the person with UAI 60 from entering a course in university with the same cutoff rank and that they enjoy immensely, and succeeding in that course?!?
UAI doesn't mean a thing when it comes to university (except entry)! And I'm sure that people at uni couldn't care less about other people's UAIs.
Oh wow, Way to go off on a tangent.patty4848 said:What's wrong with betting on both. Just because there is 39 UAI ranks between them, doesn't simply mean one will succeed 'more' and the other simply won't succeed. What's stopping the person with UAI 60 from entering a course in university with the same cutoff rank and that they enjoy immensely, and succeeding in that course?!?
UAI doesn't mean a thing when it comes to university (except entry)! And I'm sure that people at uni couldn't care less about other people's UAIs.
People who have the tendency to burn out after a prolonged period of working, would have burnt out before they even did the HSC tasks. It's unlikely that people who haven't burnt out for a year will suddenly burn out after HSC.Rebekkie said:um, no.
i'd almost argue the opposite. if i worked to get an insane uai, i'd probs burn out and just not care next year. alternately i'd not care coz a 100 would boost my ego to the point that i'd... not care.
This doesn't really address the argument though. You're just saying that a law degree must be harder because the ones with the 99 UAIs will do better at uni, where the whole point of this thread is that we don't know whether they do better or not.wrong_turn said:enteebee lets put it this way.
let us currently assume that all unversity courses are equally the same difficulty. now let us realise that the person who attains the higher uai will have either worked harder in high school, was more intelligent subject to what they studied or a combination of both.
if we placed the student who gains a 60 uai into a law degree with a cohert of students averaging a uai of 99, what are the chances that the course studied will be harder?
the chances that the course will be harder is quite high. if it were too easy, everyone will be aceing the course and it must be realised that in uni they can't let everyone pass unless it can be justified. the course therefore must be made a lot more challenging to create a greater dispersion of marks for the students completing the course. therefore it might be on average, more likely that the student with a uai of 60 may struggle to attain higher marks in comparison to this cohert.
i hope this answers the question of another degree being harder than the other and varied success of students with higher uai.
note: some degrees, especially engineering courses are just GG hahaha
This entire premise is based on a very fundamental flaw: no course is equal or standardised. The very existence of scaling and all those other formulae are testament to this.wrong_turn said:enteebee lets put it this way.
let us currently assume that all unversity courses are equally the same difficulty. now let us realise that the person who attains the higher uai will have either worked harder in high school, was more intelligent subject to what they studied or a combination of both.
Oh well that completely destroys my statementKFunk said:Some evidence of sorts: -
From (Barry & Chapman, 2007) - Predicting university performance
"Since university admissions are usually based on TER, we looked at final performance in semester 1 at university by TER, as illustrated in figure 2. As expected, there is a positive relationship between TER and final results, but with a R2 value of only 26.8%... This is expected since TER includes other, non-mathematical subjects, in its calculation." [Note, the study looked at the performance of students, drawn from all Aus states, in science and engineering degrees]
From (Nolan & Ahmadi-Esfahani, 2007) - Predicting performance in undergraduate agricultural economics
"UAI was the most strongly significant predictor of performance, with P-values of approximately zero, and a t-statistic greater than 10 for Agricultural Economics and for Economics 1, and six for Econometrics. A student’s mathematics mark was significant for all three core units, as was the dummy variable for 2 Unit mathematics. The standardised coefficients for UAI were, respectively, 0.48 for Agricultural Economics and for Economics 1, and 0.33 for Econometrics, whereas those for mathematics ranged from 0.13 for Economics to 0.28 for Econometrics. Those for independent schools ranged from 0.13 to 0.16. UAI was confirmed as the most important predictor of success"
From (Cooney) - The tertiary entrance rank - an endangered species?
"Although a meta-analysis of prediction studies is difficult because of the lack of comparability of the applicant pool and outcome measures, there is general agreement (Dobson, 1999) that a TER does predict first year performance reasonably well. When allowance is made for truncation of the TER, approximately 50-60% of the variability in first year performance as assessed by GPA can be explained by variability in the TER (Cooney, 1974, 1975). The predictive validity varies across different areas with, not surprisingly, highest validity in science based faculties because of the continuity of content between final year at school and first year university."
KFunk said:Some evidence of sorts: -
From (Barry & Chapman, 2007) - Predicting university performance
"Since university admissions are usually based on TER, we looked at final performance in semester 1 at university by TER, as illustrated in figure 2. As expected, there is a positive relationship between TER and final results, but with a R2 value of only 26.8%... This is expected since TER includes other, non-mathematical subjects, in its calculation." [Note, the study looked at the performance of students, drawn from all Aus states, in science and engineering degrees]
From (Nolan & Ahmadi-Esfahani, 2007) - Predicting performance in undergraduate agricultural economics
"UAI was the most strongly significant predictor of performance, with P-values of approximately zero, and a t-statistic greater than 10 for Agricultural Economics and for Economics 1, and six for Econometrics. A student’s mathematics mark was significant for all three core units, as was the dummy variable for 2 Unit mathematics. The standardised coefficients for UAI were, respectively, 0.48 for Agricultural Economics and for Economics 1, and 0.33 for Econometrics, whereas those for mathematics ranged from 0.13 for Economics to 0.28 for Econometrics. Those for independent schools ranged from 0.13 to 0.16. UAI was confirmed as the most important predictor of success"
From (Cooney) - The tertiary entrance rank - an endangered species?
"Although a meta-analysis of prediction studies is difficult because of the lack of comparability of the applicant pool and outcome measures, there is general agreement (Dobson, 1999) that a TER does predict first year performance reasonably well. When allowance is made for truncation of the TER, approximately 50-60% of the variability in first year performance as assessed by GPA can be explained by variability in the TER (Cooney, 1974, 1975). The predictive validity varies across different areas with, not surprisingly, highest validity in science based faculties because of the continuity of content between final year at school and first year university."
u also need to stay single, or else our country will end up like iraq or kenyaNorthRiversMatt said:You need attitude and industry to gain position in universities when you are over the target rank.