That's the whole point of me asking, I don't get how it works at all..."automatically"
stronk logic/10
That's exactly what i needed to know, thank youYou can assume that the subject is "worth" 99.95 if you come first in the state (i.e. max aggregate for that subject - USUALLY). Some obscure subjects, even if you top the state or get 100/100 HSC mark you still won't get that max aggregate - and hence, not "99.95" for that sub.
I think it's usually those obscure languages that don't get this.
Does that answer your question? Or did I interpret your q wrong
No it is scaled to an appropriate aggregate per unit. The best 10 units of aggregrate will then be used to calculate your total ATAR aggregate which is then used to determine your rank in the state.
As an example, pages 36 onwards, http://www.uac.edu.au/documents/atar/2013-ScalingReport.pdf
The maximum mark for example for Industrial Technology in 2013, gave a maximum scaled aggregate per unit of 40.6.
40.6 isn't really an aggregate which favours a 99.95.
Aggregates of 99.95 lie in the 470+/500 range usually.
I wasn't really talking about the ATAR, i just wanted to know how scaling works for a particular subject when someone tops the state.Atar is an aggregate of marks, not depending on one subject. Coming first in the state doesn't necessary mean you will get 99.95, evident with the UAC data where the maximum atar for a particular subject is not always 99.95.
It's done afresh every year and set through a process whereby the cohort of that subject is compared against other cohorts of other subjects relative to their performances in English. This is why English is compulsory for everyone; it is used in determining the individual scaling of each subject into respective aggregates.I wasn't really talking about the ATAR, i just wanted to know how scaling works for a particular subject when someone tops the state.