The Examination Mark (i.e. the HSC exam mark, which contributes 50% of a final HSC mark) is aligned. Before it is aligned, it is a raw mark. A raw mark is the actual mark that a student receives in an HSC exam. However, students are not made aware of their raw HSC exam marks unless they request them from NESA. Examples of raw and aligned Examination Marks from former HSC students in various subjects can be accessed on rawmarks.info.wait so the examination mark that you receive when you get your results, is that moderated as well or is that what you get on the day you sit the exam and what mark do the teachers receive? do they see your examination mark or your hsc mark overall?
You should hopefully be able to include links in your messages soon. Keep posting!@jimmysmith560 (Don't know why, but couldn't quote you cause of something containing a 'link' with my limit being 0? But anyways)
If your school receives your HSC marks, can't they just calculate your ATAR? Similar to how people can use an ATAR calculator, or they could use aggregate/data to calculate your ATAR anyways. Is this possible, or does it work differently? I never understood the point of schools getting this kind of data anyways (with its publication for 'flexing' on newspapers or whatnot, requiring permission), and if you are going to give all that information on performance, what difference would telling them the ATAR students received make? (assuming the calculating of ATAR using the fore-mentioned methods is possible)
Understood. Thanks for the explanation. Never would've thought of that, cause could never see my school spending money or effort into improving performance instead of the thousands of miscellaneous and non-beneficial trash that the principal splurges on (e.g. a big metal board thing hung up against a wall in a part of the quad that nobody looks at, and is not 'motivational' in any way)You should hopefully be able to include links in your messages soon. Keep posting!
While schools could try to do that (assuming that they have such capacities in the first place), it is unlikely that they will be able to determine exactly what an individual student's ATAR would be based on their HSC results, let alone entire cohorts. Keep in mind that schools are not UAC. It is also common for schools to request particular students (such as high achieving students) to inform them of their ATARs for things such as award ceremonies. This was also the case of my school back when I did my HSC.
One benefit of schools accessing HSC results (other than sharing them publicly to celebrate student achievement) is to inform them of areas where teacher performance is favourable as well as areas where improvement to the quality of teaching may be needed. For example, if a school determines that the HSC results of its Physics cohort are mostly favourable, the school will become aware that it is delivering the Physics course at a high standard. Conversely, if a school determines that the HSC results of its Physics cohort are mostly (and perhaps unexpectedly) unfavourable, this could signal a problem that needs to be addressed by the school in relation to its quality of education with respect to Physics.