As a current Year 12 student in the process of completing the Higher School Certificate, I find myself in an irked, or more to the point, frustrated, disposition. I will give you an example as to why. One of the units I study is History Extension. In an effort to prepare us for our mid-year examinations, our teacher has each student write, each week, a paragraph on a historian and their individual view and context. This is all very well. Each student, from the most seemingly studious to the motivationally-challenged would write this paragraph in a night for submission the next day. My work, because I have been allocated sufficient time to allow myself to properly think and compose expression, is of a high standard. I have, throughout the year, consistently maintained an A grade level of writing (it should be here that I do a bit of character-profiling of myself. I’m blonde (literally, as in hair colour), therefore this is what people think of me (yeah, the stereotype). An A grade for me, reflects time to think about something. No joke intended). However, come mid-year exams and this work which I have thoroughly revised and studied and attempted to duplicate in my response, is not reflected by my mark which I would describe as certainly less than satisfactory. This is a universal consensus over all my courses. The issue I have is not in knowing the content, or even the application of it. The issue I have is that the examination time the Board prescribes does not allow us, as students, to collect ourselves and properly formulate our ideas during an exam. To churn out an outstanding essay with four paragraphs that have great expression, littered with quotes or dates or facts depending on your subject, in a span of 45 minutes, which is what we are expected to do, is an exceedingly high expectation for the 16-18 year olds of New South Wales who complete the HSC. I feel that with the current time allocations we are given, does not provide the opportunity for students to present their best work and hardly what they are capable of. The only people who would argue that the current time allocations for exams are sufficient would be those students who do not have the knowledge, have not put in the effort, and hence are the ones who sit twiddling their thumbs or doodling on paper because they have finished their paper early. I believe you will find that these students do not produce high or mid-range results. The only other groups of objectors would be those who believe this is done as a discriminator to determine the great students from the masses; the supernatural.
The phrase “I ran out of time” should be classified as a cliché and made part of HSC jargon. Just a thought.
The phrase “I ran out of time” should be classified as a cliché and made part of HSC jargon. Just a thought.