Adjusting for variation in difficulty level of optional HSC exam questions
The inclusion of optional topics in HSC syllabuses allows students to focus on areas of greatest interest to them and provides topic choice for both students and teachers.
During the 2001 HSC, concerns were expressed that students would be disadvantaged by the level of difficulty of some option questions in examinations compared with others.
The Board has procedures in place to ensure that students are not disadvantaged for having chosen a particular option.
In setting exam papers all examination committees strive to make sure that optional questions are of similar intellectual demand.
They design related optional questions to assess a similar mix of skills at a comparable level of rigour. The demands of each optional question are then set down in the marking guidelines for that question.
During the pilot-marking phase minor adjustments can be made to the marking guidelines, making it more likely that comparable marks will be allocated to students of similar ability across different optional questions.
Despite these checks and adjustments, it is sometimes the case that an optional question turns out to be easier or more difficult for students than the others. In this situation a statistical adjustment is made so that the final distribution of marks for the question compares fairly with the mark distribution for the others.
As noted in the Masters report, the issue is not so much whether optional questions are equally difficult but whether students choosing different options are treated fairly in the marking if it is found that those options are not of the same difficulty.
The Board has a routine ‘marks monitoring and adjustment’ process that looks for any differences in the difficulties of optional questions and identifies cases requiring necessary statistical adjustment to marks. The process takes into account the performance of each group on the common sections of the paper. Where appropriate, statistical adjustments are then made to the spread of marks for each question.
This procedure is standard practice.
http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/hsc/hsc_update_2002_02.html