Haha, I'd called it the inconvenient truth of UWS~~~ there are simply too many dickheads in outside UWS law and med schools~~~Not offending anyone, but generally speaking, wouldnt there be much more smart people at USYD and UNSW compared to UWS? i mean there may well be some smart people at UWS, but compared to those big unis, there percentage is small.
Err.. sounds to me that system means it is indeed easier to get a high WAM/GPA at UWS. Certain precentage of HDs, Ds, Cs... and the cohort...UWS uses a standardised grading scale meaning there will generally only be a certain % of HDs, Ds, Cs etc allocated for every course.
it sounds to me like so too... and hearing about all the people who got 50-60 UAI getting GPA of 6s ( ive been hearing this alot from not just in bored of studies).It is extremely hard to get GPA of 6 in USYD and UNSW for the same course i hear. So... to transfer to med or other high atar req course, i rekon we shud go for UWS unless GPA for UWS are worth less or somethingErr.. sounds to me that system means it is indeed easier to get a high WAM/GPA at UWS. Certain precentage of HDs, Ds, Cs... and the cohort...
Probably. They consider the institution you are applying from. No one can tell me a GPA of 6 is equally hard/easy in Harvard and USyd.it sounds to me like so too... and hearing about all the people who got 50-60 UAI getting GPA of 6s ( ive been hearing this alot from not just in bored of studies).It is extremely hard to get GPA of 6 in USYD and UNSW for the same course i hear. So... to transfer to med or other high atar req course, i rekon we shud go for UWS unless GPA for UWS are worth less or something
So you're saying that either UWS has fewer high marks, or that it attracts more students who perform better in university than high school?While USYD and UNSW may have higher concentrations of higher achieving students university marking is different to high school.
All I am saying is its a bit hard to say for sure that just because USYD and UNSW has the most students with the higher ATARs that this will translate directly into a huge number of people who are good at university style assessment, while its an indicator, not all those people may be able to be as successful at uni (i.e. absence to tuition, less spoon feeding, diffrenty teching styles) I am not saying UWS has more students who are better adjusted, I think its not the best way to know what your comptetion is like is all. I did noticed thought that UWS had fewer high marks, it did not seem that there were a heap of HDs or Ds, only the hard working and smart students got them, I didn't find it any easier at UWS to get marks than at MQ. I don't know how much truth in it but I have been told time and time again by lecturers that if a paper doesn't deserve a HD it wont get one, isn't that what those marking bands were for?. I remember in my first year I got two assignments were I got 29.75/40, I said to the academic, why was I so close to a D yet you didn't give me one and he said 'it just wasn't quite a D paper' I would hope that is how it normally works but I guess you would have to ask the markers.So you're saying that either UWS has fewer high marks, or that it attracts more students who perform better in university than high school?
The only problem I see with that is that sometimes you get a crazy lecturer who wants a super hard exam... i.e. our corp law one was insanely difficult, yet its not the norm. I think you'd have to look into it a bit further than thatHas anyone compared the standard of assessment between institutions?
e.g. Equity @ Macq law v Equity @ USYD law
I have seen the exam papers for both institutions in the same year and I would say that there is a difference in terms of difficulty.
Well usually, good marks in high school will translate to good marks in uni. Obviously that's not a rule, but it's generally true.I did noticed thought that UWS had fewer high marks, it did not seem that there were a heap of HDs or Ds, only the hard working and smart students got them, I didn't find it any easier at UWS to get marks than at MQ.
I don't have any stats, it seemed like there weren't many but its not in anyway definative, do you feel that MQ gives the same number of higher marks despite the 'less intelligent' cohort.Well usually, good marks in high school will translate to good marks in uni. Obviously that's not a rule, but it's generally true.
So one would assume that because people with lower high school marks go to UWS, that either UWS grades more easily and gives out the same amount of higher marks, or that fewer high marks are given out.
I'm not calling you a lier or whatever, but I'd find it hard to believe if they gave out significantly less higher marks.
This is very interesting.I found this interesting, it was posted re: the difficulty of the USYD law degree , I doubt UWS or MQ would have figures that high for D/HD so either they give out more to account for their cohort or its no harder to get high marks? I just don't understand how you can have so many D's HD's
http://suls.org.au/index2.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_view&gid=20&Itemid=28
This seems inherently flawed to me. It's as if High Distinctions, Distinctions, etc, are given out merely as a ranking system within the cohort - rather than an indication of actual competence in regards the objectives and requirements of the course.As very few units reach above a 5% High Distinction level, effectively the total Ds and HDs will not exceed 35% unless coordinators are willing to ‘bump up’ students to HDs to give space for more Ds.