It does require some talent to get 95 or above in Mathematics Extension 2. You really have to know your concepts and be able to apply them efficiently and logically.
I'm assuming he's talking about the Talented Students Program that the University of Sydney offers,
http://www.science.usyd.edu.au/fstud...sp/index.shtml.
Nope, Special Studies Program for Mathematics is a DIFFERENT program to Talented Students Program for Mathematics at USYD.
Semester 1:
http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1906/
http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1906/r/
Semester 2:
http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1907/
http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/UG/JM/MATH1907/r/
Mathematics Special Studies Program is a course which is formally attached to the Advanced Calculus courses (Differential for Semester 1 and Integral for Semester 2). It involves learning "extra" material in mathematics. It particularly delves into the many applications of mathematics in society. Basically each semester you learn 3 'special' topics in addition to your usual calculus workload. For each of these special topics you are given an assignment to complete and hand in. The marks from these assignments "top up" to your calculus marks (i.e. extra marks built on top of your advanced calculus mark).
The requirement to get into this course is by staff selection. Basically you attend an information meeting on the first week of lectures and fill out a form to express your interest.
For first semester, I don't think you need a Mathematics Extension 2 mark of 95+. I actually got a lower than expected 94 for Mathematics Extension 2 and still got in. Anyways I think they lowered the requirement to
just a band E4 (i.e. 90+) in Mathematics Extension 2 and a UAI of at least 98.something. Also, if you do Bachelor of Science (Advanced Mathematics) you are already guaranteed a spot regardless of anything else. Otherwise, as long as you express genuine interests in mathematics you should be able to get in.
For second semester, the requirements are different. If you were already enrolled in SSP in first semester and got a Distinction or higher, you're guaranteed a spot. If you did not enrol in SSP first semester you need to get a High Distinction in the advanced calculus course to qualify. Otherwise, express how much you love mathematics on the form.
I took both Maths SSP units last year and found some of the topics quite interesting. The assignments were a pain though, because you get extra workload than other people. Some of the topics covered when I did it were Bernoulli Numbers/Polynomials, Maps of the World, Cryptography, Cellular Automata...etc.