charmingman
New Member
I want to get a band 6 in my subjects but my internal marks are bad and my school is bad, however my ranks are alrite (top 3).
They do count. They are a factor in how your school mark will be moderated. 'How 'well' your school mark will be moderated will depend on the cohort's efforts in the exam.Internal Marks don't count at all.
so do they count for 50% of the ATAR?They do count. They are a factor in how your school mark will be moderated. 'How 'well' your school mark will be moderated will depend on the cohort's efforts in the exam.
That's not true. Your moderated assessment is a function of the following variables: highest raw assessment mark, lowest raw assessment mark, average of the raw assessment marks, standard deviation of the raw assessment marks, highest HSC exam mark, lowest HSC exam mark and the average of the HSC exam marks.The actual mark given to you at school doesn't count. Only your rank does.
Edit: Forgot to add: The HSC school mark is 50% of your overall HSC mark for that subject. A band 6 means your overall HSC mark was >= 90. The HSC school marks are determined from your rank and the exam marks of your cohort relative to you. The actual mark your school gives you on your final report is irrelevant.
Once moderated, yes.so do they count for 50% of the ATAR?
Refer "The Moderation of Higher School Certificate Assessments using a Quadratic Polynomial Transformation: a Technical Paper" by Dr Robert MacCann, who designed the HSC moderation process that has been used since 1992. Furthermore, http://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/portal/nesa/11-12/hsc/about-HSC/moderation confirms my understanding, to be explained below.Do you have sources for this information? Because I have never read a single source that claims that school asessment marks are relevant. Furthermore, your rank is absolutely everything, and is the strongest factor in determining your HSC assessment mark.
This is incorrect. Refer http://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/portal/nesa/11-12/hsc/about-HSC/moderation where it states "The relative gaps between the students’ moderated assessments are similar to the relative gaps between students as shown in the school assessment marks". This is achievable if and only if the school assessment marks are used to calculate the moderated assessment mark.Your HSC assessment mark is determined from your rank and the HSC exam marks of the students in your cohort. At no point are the individual marks of your school assessments used in the calculation of your HSC assessment mark.
Correct, hence the process of moderation.You cannot compare school assessments between schools. 80% raw at James Ruse is not the same as 80% raw in some school ranked 500th. Comparing raw assessment marks between schools is like comparing apples to oranges - it can't be done and it is meaningless to try.
Incorrect, refer above.So the way they determine your HSC school assessment mark is through your rank, and the HSC exam marks of your cohort.
Correct, the moderated assessment mark of the student who has the highest school assessment mark will be aligned to equal the highest HSC exam mark of any student in the cohort.If you came 1st in your school, your HSC assessment mark is taken to be the highest exam mark received by your cohort.
Incorrect, and probably the biggest misunderstanding of the entire moderation process. Refer: http://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/portal/nesa/11-12/hsc/about-HSC/moderation where the example given clearly shows the moderated assessment mark of the student ranked 2nd (a mark of 77) did not receive the 2nd highest HSC exam mark (a mark of 80). This is due to the requirement to maintain relative gaps between students.If you came 2nd, your HSC assessment mark is taken to be the second highest exam mark.
No, teachers are not sources of truth and an informed teacher would agree with my understanding.This is how they calculate your HSC assessment mark, and any teacher can confirm this.
Matrix Education is not an authoritative source. They are incorrect in their explanation on how to calculate the moderated assessment mark.
Nothing in that link contradicts what I have said. It's all fairly generic information and intended to be because UAC does not moderate marks. They simply process the raw moderated assessment marks as given by NESA.Edit: See also p9 of the UAC scaling guide: https://www.uac.edu.au/assets/documents/scaling-reports/Scaling-Report-2017-NSW-HSC.pdf
That video is not technical. It's a layman's explanation for students and teachers who are not bothered to read the entire website or do not understand the technical process. To explain what David de Carvalho is referring to, listen to what he goes on to say: "It tells us how you did compared to other students in your school group". This means two things: 1) You are not being compared to students at other schools; and 2) Your rank order is maintained when the moderation process is carried out. This is why it is important, not because it is used to calculate your moderated assessment mark. Regardless, your rank, i.e. 1st, 2nd, 3rd, is not a variable that is used to calculate the moderated assessment mark.See also from NESA: http://educationstandards.nsw.edu.au/wps/portal/nesa/11-12/hsc/about-HSC/moderation
They all state the same thing. The video in the last link for NESA explains it pretty well. Quoting from the video: "your RANK is the most important part of the moderation process." The notion that your ranking does not affect the moderated assessment mark is completely untrue.