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that sucks, so aligned marks have nothing to do with scaling? eg; say 80% advanced english aligns to 90%...how is it scaled from there? or what happens to it next?Raw mark is the mark that is attained after the exam has been marked; eg. you do say a 3 unit maths exam, and you get 63/84 - that is your raw mark. Now, this mark is not released to you. First the board of studies aligns the raw mark according to standards, so since 3 unit maths aligns very well, 63/84 aligns to ~92/100 (or 46/50). That is your aligned exam mark. Next, the BOS moderates and aligns your assessment marks, and then averages them with your aligned exam marks - eg. if your moderated/aligned assessment mark was say 88/100 (or 44/50) and aligned exam is 92/100, they do (92+88)/2 = 90 <-- THAT is your HSC mark.
Scaled marks work differently - the UAC takes your RAW exam marks and moderated assessment marks (before aligning), and scale them based on the scaled mean (average) of how the whole state performs - the higher the scaled mean, the better the subject scales; eg. in 2010, 3 unit maths had a scaled mean of 39.8/50 (or 79.6/100), this means it scales extremely well. Remember, aligned marks have NOTHING to do with scaling - they are not used in the calculation of your ATAR.
Well, the 80% raw mark would be scaled, not the aligned mark. Advanced English had a scaled mean of 32.5 in 2010, so if you attained your 80 raw, it'll scale to 32.5/50 (65/100), which is pretty good compared to the scaling of many other subjects.that sucks, so aligned marks have nothing to do with scaling? eg; say 80% advanced english aligns to 90%...how is it scaled from there? or what happens to it next?