as long as your assesment rank is reflective of your HSC performance (which it is in 99% of cases), you will, by no means, be dragged down by being in a poor class.
Now lets examine the disadvantages of being in a lower achieving class (by class i imply all those attempting a particular subject at you school of course). If you are in a lower achieving class and you come first in the assesment rankings but screw up your HSC exam, your assesment mark will also suffer to the same extent.
If, however, your attending a high performing school and come first in the assesment rankings but screw up your HSC, your assesment mark will be, for the most part, uncompromised.
The affect of peer groups on marks isnt as subjective and unexplainable as so many people think. For the most part, the mark people recieve is the mark they deserve regardless of the school they attend (ignoring the level education)
to understand how this works check out the many threads on scaling and the alignment of marks. its a really simple process and i think too many people post before searching and reading and it always ends up with lazarus making a repetitive post in every second thread (though im sure he enjoys it all the more
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