Without Wings
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 6,350
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- N/A
How to post in the Forums
Search The Forum
Using the menu at the top right hand corner of the window, select ‘Search This Forum’, which will take you to the search menu. Alternatively scroll down the page to the search menu:
Type in the key words of your question, and check the results, as your question may have been answered previously.
Check The Resources Section
Bored Of Studies has an extensive resources sections with a range of notes, essays and respones. You can see if your question is covered in one of these. The resource page for Economics is available here.
Check The Biki
Browse through the Biki to see if the information you are looking for is available there. The Economics section of the Biki is available here.
What to write in your question/thread/post:
The better set out your thread is the easier and quicker it is for others to respond. When creating a thread please include the following:
Remember:
HSC Economics Resources
Bored of Studies
BOS Economics Resources Page A collection of member submitted material including essays, assesments and topic notes/summaries. These are for reference only to show what other students have done. Under no circumstances are you to copy the work of another students, this is plagiarism.
The Biki (BoS Wiki)
For general course information, an economics glossary and extensive notes based on the syllabus. Access the Biki Economics page here
Board of Studies
Economics Syllabus
Past
HSC Exams
Online Multiple Choice Questions
Standards Packages
Economic related Statistics, Issues and Organisations
Australian Bureau of Statistics
Department of Foreign Affairs & Trading
Australian Government Treasury
Australian Government - Commonwealth Budget
Reserve Bank of Australia
Austrade
Monthly Economic and Social Indicators
Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources
International Monetary Fund
World Trade Organisation
Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE)
Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)
Australian Council of Social Services
Australian Policy Online
Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research
National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling
http://alex.edfac.usyd.edu.au/Metho...E/eco_oten.html
http://www.anz.com.au/Business/info...co_snapshot.asp
http://www.bized.ac.uk/index.htm
DFAT
Publication - Globalisation, Keeping the Gains
Media
Sydney Morning Herald
The Australian Financial Review
Business Review Weekly
Daily Telegraph
ABC News
The
Associated Press
The Economist
International Media
The New York Times
Reuters
The Washington Post
The Wall Street Journal
Other Resources
Leading Edge Education
Leading Edge Exam Strategy Slides
Leading Edge Case Study: Globalisation and Economic Development in Sub-Saharan Africa
Creative Classroom (Discuss here.)
Greenacre Education Publications - the complete guide to hsc economics
Economics Exam Paper Outline
How to Make A Good Essay Great (by gnrlies)
How to Write Band 6 Essays (by green_tealeaves)
Sample Economic Essays (by Minai)
Advice for Economics (by Sparcod)
Multiple Choice Tips
Tips for answering multiple choice:
Source: Test Taking Tips
What To Do If More Than One Answer Seems Correct
If you’re utterly stumped by a question, here are some strategies to help you narrow the field and select the correct answer:
Other Tips:
- Utilise information and insights that you’ve acquired in working through the entire test to go back and answer earlier items that you weren’t sure of.
I don’t believe each of the above tips apply to all examinations so pick and choose what suits you and the style of exam
Search The Forum
Using the menu at the top right hand corner of the window, select ‘Search This Forum’, which will take you to the search menu. Alternatively scroll down the page to the search menu:
Type in the key words of your question, and check the results, as your question may have been answered previously.
Check The Resources Section
Bored Of Studies has an extensive resources sections with a range of notes, essays and respones. You can see if your question is covered in one of these. The resource page for Economics is available here.
Check The Biki
Browse through the Biki to see if the information you are looking for is available there. The Economics section of the Biki is available here.
What to write in your question/thread/post:
The better set out your thread is the easier and quicker it is for others to respond. When creating a thread please include the following:
- A title which includes a description of the type of help you need. Eg: “Unemployment Trends”
- Which module the question refers to: ie, “Economic Issues”or “Australia in the Global Economy”
- A concise description of the help you need. Please don’t just paste a question - we are not here to do you work for you. State exactly what area you need help with.
- What you already know. You need to include some evidence to show us you have done your own work and attempted to answer the question yourself.
- If you are asking about a question from a past paper etc please include how many marks the question is worth to enable people to give you the best possible help.
Remember:
- Please do not post up your assessment. If you have written an essay or response which you want others to critique post a thread asking and suggest that you will PM your response to members who are willing to assist you. Posting your response on the forums (particularly before you have handed it in) leaves it open to plagiarism and the last thing I want is to see a member plagiarise another members assessment.
- We are here to guide you, not do your work for you.
- Please use the search forum before asking a question as there may already be a thread with your answer.
- Please dont use this forum to spam. Please take off topic conversation to the appropriate forum.
HSC Economics Resources
Bored of Studies
BOS Economics Resources Page A collection of member submitted material including essays, assesments and topic notes/summaries. These are for reference only to show what other students have done. Under no circumstances are you to copy the work of another students, this is plagiarism.
The Biki (BoS Wiki)
For general course information, an economics glossary and extensive notes based on the syllabus. Access the Biki Economics page here
Board of Studies
Economics Syllabus
Past
HSC Exams
Online Multiple Choice Questions
Standards Packages
Economic related Statistics, Issues and Organisations
Australian Bureau of Statistics
Department of Foreign Affairs & Trading
Australian Government Treasury
Australian Government - Commonwealth Budget
Reserve Bank of Australia
Austrade
Monthly Economic and Social Indicators
Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources
International Monetary Fund
World Trade Organisation
Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE)
Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)
Australian Council of Social Services
Australian Policy Online
Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research
National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling
http://alex.edfac.usyd.edu.au/Metho...E/eco_oten.html
http://www.anz.com.au/Business/info...co_snapshot.asp
http://www.bized.ac.uk/index.htm
DFAT
Publication - Globalisation, Keeping the Gains
Media
Sydney Morning Herald
The Australian Financial Review
Business Review Weekly
Daily Telegraph
ABC News
The
Associated Press
The Economist
International Media
The New York Times
Reuters
The Washington Post
The Wall Street Journal
Other Resources
Leading Edge Education
Leading Edge Exam Strategy Slides
Leading Edge Case Study: Globalisation and Economic Development in Sub-Saharan Africa
Creative Classroom (Discuss here.)
Greenacre Education Publications - the complete guide to hsc economics
Economics Exam Paper Outline
How to Make A Good Essay Great (by gnrlies)
How to Write Band 6 Essays (by green_tealeaves)
Sample Economic Essays (by Minai)
Advice for Economics (by Sparcod)
Multiple Choice Tips
Tips for answering multiple choice:
- Read the question before you look at the answer.
- Come up with the answer in your head before looking at the possible answers, this way the choices given on the test won’t throw you off or trick you.
- Eliminate answers you know aren’t right.
- Read all the choices before choosing your answer.
- If there is no guessing penalty, always take an educated guess and select an answer.
- Don’t keep on changing your answer, usually your first choice is the right one, unless you miss-read the question.
- In “All of the above” and “None of the above”choices, if you are certain one of the statements is true don’t choose “None of the above”or one of the statements are false don’t choose “All of the above”.
- In a question with an “All of the above”choice, if you see that at least two correct statements, then “All of the above”is probably the answer.
- Usually the correct answer is the choice with the most information (but this is not always the case).
Source: Test Taking Tips
What To Do If More Than One Answer Seems Correct
If you’re utterly stumped by a question, here are some strategies to help you narrow the field and select the correct answer:
- Ask yourself whether the answer you’re considering completely addresses the question. If the test answer is only partly true or is true only under certain narrow conditions, then it’s probably not the right answer. If you have to make a significant assumption in order for the answer to be true, ask yourself whether this assumption is obvious enough that the instructor would expect everyone to make it. If not, dump the answer overboard.
- If, after your very best effort, you cannot choose between two alternatives, try vividly imagining each one as the correct answer. If you are like most people, you will often “feel”that one of the answers is wrong. Trust this feeling -- research suggests that feelings are frequently accessible even when recall is poor (e.g., we can still know how we feel about a person even if we can’t remember the person’s name). Although this tip is not infallible, many students find it useful.
Other Tips:
- Utilise information and insights that you’ve acquired in working through the entire test to go back and answer earlier items that you weren’t sure of.
I don’t believe each of the above tips apply to all examinations so pick and choose what suits you and the style of exam
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