whatashotbyseve
It all counts
Source: SMHSOME students are opting for the International Baccalaureate instead of the Higher School Certificate to avoid having their marks in humanities subjects scaled down.
Greg Valentine, the representative for the International Baccalaureate in Australia, said all subjects in it were treated equally and graded out of seven.
"There is no scaling with any of the subjects. A seven is a seven whether you get it in English, maths or music. Intelligence in the performing arts is valued equally to the sciences in the IB."
Last year 306 students in NSW and 1700 across Australia completed the International Baccalaureate, whose candidature was growing by about 15 per cent a year, Mr Valentine said.
Harry Knight, 18, one of 38 students to complete the baccalaureate at SCECGS Redlands last year, received a mark of 44 out of 55, equivalent to a Universities Admissions Index of 99.9.
He chose the baccalaureate over the HSC in the belief that his mark for drama would have been scaled down in the HSC.
"Drama is as important as maths and English in the IB. I had friends who did drama for the HSC who were done over because of the scaling."
Harry, whose dream is to work with the Bell Shakespeare company, said he planned to study arts/law at the University of Sydney before reapplying for a place at the National Institute of Dramatic Art.
Antony Mayrhofer, director of the International Baccalaureate at St Paul's Grammar School, Penrith, said the baccalaureate did not discriminate against the arts. "We find students who are talented in the arts often avoid the HSC subjects because of a fear of being scaled down. If they are an average student in an arts subject their marks come down in the scaling process for the HSC, but that is not the case at all in the IB."
Mr Mayrhofer said close to half the students who studied visual arts received a grade 7.
About half of the 120 year 12 students at St Paul's completed the HSC, and the other half studied for the baccalaureate.
"A higher proportion of the IB students are doing arts than the HSC group at our school. Our school is the best performing school in western Sydney academically, but you wouldn't know it looking at the league tables, because they are purely based on HSC performers.
"We had 34 students who had a UAI above 91 last year who aren't on those tables."
Professor George Cooney, who has chaired the scaling committee that has responsibility for calculating the UAI, said the belief that humanities subjects were scaled down relative to science subjects was false. "It is untrue. It is an urban myth promulgated for 20 years, but it is no truer now than it was 20 years ago.
"The scaled mark you get depends on how good you are - your position in the course and the overall quality of the candidature.
"We have had students who do drama get a UAI of 100 in the past."
And this is why the IB is flawed. I'm sorry, if you get 44/55 you are not smarter than 99.9% of the state. The whole degree just sounds pretentious to me. Discuss.