dp624
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- Oct 16, 2008
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- HSC
- 2008
Ok. Say you top your internals AND the externals. And several people did. THe way I think they would do it is by comparing your mark to the mark of the person placed 2nd at your school. Etc.Patar said:This may be true I don't know, but there are a few people who DO score 100% raw, and are of course in the running for state ranks. They don't all get first place.
The entries are still given full marks, but they are judged personally for the purposes of state ranks.
I guess that, unless the people who came first and second got 101/100, they used the panel of judges that my teacher said the responses were brought before. And decided from there.
Sure, those top few all got 100/100 - but in terms of a state rank the HSC judges (note: not markers, judges, though all judges are markers) judged the better response over and above the mark value.
the student I was talking about was Amy Maguire -- she and that other guy both got 100 in terms of raw marks I think. But as it went, the judges decided that one or two entries were better than hers and the other who came equal third.
Not if five or so people get 100/100 raw. This can and does happen.
There needs to be a way to judge; the markers cannot go to internals because of the inconsistent marking scheme across schools.
I'm only saying what happens in Ancient. There are judges there who determine the rankings of the top, high-scoring, 100/100 answers.
Perhaps this is different in Mathematics, but I do doubt it strongly -
Exactly, internals can't be used, raw marks are often equally 100/100... so they have judges to decide on the best answers.
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If the gap between you and 2nd internal is greater, then you're ranked higher. Methinks