You should just look at the specific uni's website. E.g. Search UNSW B Science etc. Annother good option would be to go to your careers advisor and ask for a UAC guide, they have all the courses in them.
What part of polynomials do you guys find hard, I think most of its pretty alright especically since my teacher taught roots of unity as a part of complex numbers. Graphs sometimes can stuff me up but they're not that hard I guess.
You do 4U maths work it out m8! But seriously if there is a big gap between your (good subjects) and english it could drag you down a alot. %20 is a pretty large chunk if you get low scores.
I have two strategies one is to try and blank my mind and kick into gear as soon as the reading time starts you'd be suprised when you're relaxed how much you can remember. For maths exams now I treat them like a game and sort of go, how can I get the highest score. It makes it less stressful...
I'd say do what YOU want to because chem probably will not get any easier/interesing if you don't like it allready. Going great in acient will always trump going mediocre in chem.
Fred has allready found a group but I'm still looking for one, so if anyone is interested just email me @ daniel-patrick@hotmail.com.au or text me on 0432990893 and we can get this sorted.
Thanks
PE to me was shit until I dropped it, bio is easy but I don't really like it anymore either... but I would definitely say Bio > PE. Plus if you hate questions like what is health/fitness you're going to loathe PE because from my experience it dosen't get any better.
Keep your options open, because doing 3 sciences makes me mad, love chem / phys but bio gives me a headache not because its hard just because of teacher and having to study units and units of science can become an uphill battle imo
There is still like 9 months till the HSC exams, suppose you did 3 hours of study for the holidays everyday but did no more for the rest of the year you would be fucked, sure studying would have helped but its not going to doom anyone to failure either imo.
Re: HDPE and LDPE
Also HDPE is produced under low pressure and temperature using the 'Ziegler-Natta' process and LDPE is produced under high temperatures and 1000-3000 times atmospheric
It is impossible to tell given factors like difficulty of the tests, how the teachers mark etc. You just need to worry about what you can control getting the best marks you can and therefore putting yourself in a postition to achieve 95+