- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 8,391
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2006
Three questions and maybe some more if more come to my head:
- If a course is 'negatively scaled' then is it correct to say that the raw mark is always higher than the scaled mark? Similarly, if a course is 'positively scaled' then does that mean the raw mark is always lower than the scaled mark?
- If a course 'scales up' really high like Mathematics Extension 2, what if person scored a raw mark of 100? Obviously he/she would get the maximum 100 scaled mark, but what about those behind him/her?. Say 1st was 100 and second was 98, then would second be scaled to like 99.9, while first receives 100? If that is the case then would it be valid to say that people at the very top of some courses would be minimally affected by scaling?
- With the aligning process, there is a standards setting procedure used to determine which range of raw marks fit into a particular band. If English Standard and English Advanced are aligned differently, then why are their performance descriptors identical?
- If a course is 'negatively scaled' then is it correct to say that the raw mark is always higher than the scaled mark? Similarly, if a course is 'positively scaled' then does that mean the raw mark is always lower than the scaled mark?
- If a course 'scales up' really high like Mathematics Extension 2, what if person scored a raw mark of 100? Obviously he/she would get the maximum 100 scaled mark, but what about those behind him/her?. Say 1st was 100 and second was 98, then would second be scaled to like 99.9, while first receives 100? If that is the case then would it be valid to say that people at the very top of some courses would be minimally affected by scaling?
- With the aligning process, there is a standards setting procedure used to determine which range of raw marks fit into a particular band. If English Standard and English Advanced are aligned differently, then why are their performance descriptors identical?