re: "Board of Studies lashed over HSC" and other stories
Are you after the banding levels of the questions as well because I can't see how the subject effects the use of cut offs.
No - I referred to mathematics because I think it's relatively simple and straightforward for a student to mark their own maths paper, thereby obtaining a total raw mark, and then to align the raw mark using the cut-offs previously determined for the paper.
It's obviously much harder to do this with most other courses as they involve answers that are not strictly right or wrong (e.g. English). There is litte practical benefit gained from having the cut-offs for those courses.
I can't see the harm in publishing your raw marks raw but I don't think they are really going to understand anymore about how their ATARs are calculated. I think its just going to make more confusion because people will look at their own marks and start questioning why their marks were manipulated like they were because they don't have the whole cohort's marks
I don't think publishing raw marks will give students an understanding of how ATARs are calculated. I do think that suppressing raw marks will prevent students from understanding how ATARs are calculated.
In my mind, publishing the marks opens the door to understanding - it's necessary but not sufficient - it's just the first step.
Fair enough but when it takes days to train a teacher to do it for about 7-10 marks of an exam, do you really think it is going to be feasible to train students to correctly interpret every guideline?
I didn't mean to suggest that students should learn how to act in a capacity similar to the Board's teacher-judges who set the cut-offs. I was intending to refer to the tertiary entrance side of the system.
I meant that students might now be able to obtain statements of their raw and scaled marks and see how their scaled aggregate, cohort percentile and ATAR have been calculated from those marks.
I maintain the belief that it is possible to educate students about scaling, ATARs and how their marks are adjusted. I think the truth of that proposition can clearly be seen from the discussions which take place on this website.
There is no doubt that there are students out there who have no idea what they're talking about when it comes to scaling. But there are also those who have put some effort into understanding the system and are capable of explaining it to others.
The number of intelligent - and, more importantly, accurate - discussions concerning scaling etc which have taken place on this website since we launched in 2002 has increased dramatically. People still get it wrong. But there is much greater awareness of the technical points now and many more are getting it right.
In my mind the next challenge is to bring this understanding to the greater student population, either by educating them directly or equipping a sufficient number of students with the knowledge to go out and explain it to others themselves.