Modern scales a bit lower, but better if you get 93%+On your answer to 1), if a person does not do maths, but takes subjects they enjoy which all have similar or better scaling than 2U Mathematics (and there are quite a few subjects that do scale better or similarly, e.g. Modern History, some languages, sciences), I believe he should be just as capable of getting an ATAR of 99+ as someone who does maths.
Definitely. There is some degree of subjectivity that comes into humanities subjects. But if you are really really brilliant at writing in general, I reckon there is much less risk (which definitely applies to his case since he can write better than teachers)haha yeah technically you can get any uai with any combination of subjects (i think, as long as you're eligible for an atar), and lots of people get 99+ with no maths/sciences, but as I said, i reckon it's riskier and harder...
Maths isn't black and white though. There are many ways of getting an answer and you also get marks for working. If the marker doesn't like your working and it doesn't conform to theories and mathematical models; you lose marks.Definitely. There is some degree of subjectivity that comes into humanities subjects. But if you are really really brilliant at writing in general, I reckon there is much less risk (which definitely applies to his case since he can write better than teachers)
Yes that's true. Maths isn't black and white. But as long as you explain how you achieved the right answers, whether marker doesn't like your working or not, you should still get full marks. Maths is supposed to remove all the bias.Maths isn't black and white though. There are many ways of getting an answer and you also get marks for working. If the marker doesn't like your working and it doesn't conform to theories and mathematical models; you lose marks.
Science is becoming more subjective, too. That said, in English, if you're a good writer and have studied your modules well - you shouldn't technically be marked down just because the marker doesn't like your writing. They have judges who set band standards. Markers also compare.
And if you're a good writer - your writing should appeal to a whole range of people.
All of these professions benefit from doing MX2 to some degree. Especially the financial onesWhy is Maths so highly regarded? What makes EX1&2 maths SO good. Like, you don't really grow up to be a mathematician? However if you do economics and business, you could be like financial consultant, financial planner, economist, stockbroker, business owner and CEO etc. Or Biology like botanist, marine biologist, zoo keeper etc...
Because it's easily the most difficult subject out there. Not many people can do that high level maths. You don't get numbers usually in MX2. It's not as simple as 1 + 1 = 2. You play with variables, you get say: This is x, this is g, this distance is 2, this angle is pi/6 and blah blah blah, and then you have to show that this other side is like 12x+g/pi or something. Just look at an MX2 paper.Why is Maths so highly regarded? What makes EX1&2 maths SO good. Like, you don't really grow up to be a mathematician? However if you do economics and business, you could be like financial consultant, financial planner, economist, stockbroker, business owner and CEO etc. Or Biology like botanist, marine biologist, zoo keeper etc...