That is exactly true. We cannot control anything but ourselves.Why can't we all just do our best, get the highest we can, and let the system do whatever it does?
Yeah, this is correct. All of this.I know this sounds really petty, and pedantic, yet I was told a while ago that for equal first place moderation, they average the 2 best marks for internal marks.
In a hypothetical situation, if say the top marks were 97 and 91, wouldn't it be better for one student to come slightly second by a very small margin 1% or so, and instead of both getting internals of 94, one would get 97 and one 96~ advantaging them both.
So is this method of averaging the 2 top marks true in this case, because it seems like it could be flawed in a way.
That would also depend on the school. If you were at say, Ruse, I wouldn't mind being equal first...Yeah, this is correct. All of this.
Chemistry at my school had two people equal first. The top external was 91 and second was 86 so the top mark ended up being 87. That shit cray. (also, yeah, neither of the people equal first got those externals. It was 4th/10 and 7th/10.)
Whereas for biology the top was first by 3% and then 2nd and 3rd were separated by a *tiny* margin and since first place got 96 and someone 5th got 93 both 2nd and third place got 93 which was great considering they did shit.
So like, equal first is shit.
Everywhere else it's fine.
Yay.
you couldn't physically get first in the state unless the person equal with you came second (or equal first with you).That would also depend on the school. If you were at say, Ruse, I wouldn't mind being equal first...
That depends, in some cases, the top two could be rank 1 and 2 in the state. Their internals would probably be the average and maybe a raw mark difference or so in the externals.you couldn't physically get first in the state unless the person equal with you came second (or equal first with you).
So in other words the z-score * weighting? From my little understanding of stats that is ridiculous and wouldn't work properly.Um it was... (raw-average)/(standard deviation) * weighting
I don't know if they round.
I said unless that was the case.That depends, in some cases, the top two could be rank 1 and 2 in the state. Their internals would probably be the average and maybe a raw mark difference or so in the externals.
Schools submit whole marks only - at least in my 20+ years of teaching the HSC. There has never been a provision for the submission of anything but whole marks so the 90.18 can go in as 91 or 90. If there is another student who would round to 90 but is below 90 the school could send the top student in as 91 and the second as 90 - which is what my school tries to do.Depends on how your school submits marks. The school pretty much has freedom with the marks they send- they could send it off as 90.18 or just as 90.00 if they wanted which is like effective rounding.
Your teacher is ill-informed or is misleading you. Marks determine ranks - how the hell does a rank determine an assessment mark? You need raw assessment marks, like that 17/20, to determine your raw school assessment mark. You sit the HSC then BOS knows the highest/lowest exam marks. All assessment marks are now moderated so the average of school marks is the same as the average of exam marks, and that all assessment marks are within the highest/lowest exam marks. So, if the highest exam mark is 95, and the lowest is 80, then all your assessment marks will be altered so they are within these two marks. Then, let's say you're 'n' raw marks behind first place, then you will receive an assessment mark which is proportionally the same as the raw marks.Excuse my stupidity here, but how excactly do schools decide what assessment score you get? One of my teachers always says "your mark doesn't matter, only the rank" when referring to assessment tasks (eg I was bummed about getting 17/20 but it ranked 1st so apparently that was as good as 20/20). It doesn't make sense to me if that is the case, but then again none of it really does...feels like the whole system is way behind to me.