Shadowdude
Cult of Personality
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2009
- Messages
- 12,145
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2010
After my Legal Studies teacher took the liberty to predict ATAR's during a boring Friday class and told me to play around with the UMAX calculator: UAI Calculator & ATAR Calculator
I've been thinking, is it really a good thing to do, or is it just putting unnecessary expectations on yourself?
For example, I combined the UMAX results with Table A2 - and critically evaluated myself, saying, "Okay, 11% of the students in English Advanced got Band 6s. Or around 3000 students with the median score at 80. Do I place myself in the top 3000?" I said, 'No', and put in 87 as a guesstimate.
Then I did it for the rest. So I got:
ADV - 87, EX1 - 90, EX2 - 93, MX1 - 95, MX2 - 94, CHM - 88, PHY - 88, LGL - 92
That gave me 98.70.
Then I thought that seemed too high and so I put what I would probably get on a bad day.
ADV - 84, EX1 - 87, EX2 - 90, MX1 - 90, MX2 - 91, CHM - 86, PHY - 85, LGL - 88
That gave me 97.25.
Which still seems too high. Then I plugged in the median numbers from Table A2 and I got 93.10.
Then I plugged in what I thought I could get if I tried really, really, really hard.
ADV - 92, EX1 - 94, EX2 - 96, MX1 - 97, MX2 - 97, CHM - 94, PHY - 94, LGL - 97.
And I got... 99.95.
So I'm a bit confuzzled. Is this a good idea to play around with it, or am I just placing unnecessary stress on myself?
Sure, at standard I 'should' get 93.10, but that'd mean if I get lower, I'm below the state average and as my Physics teacher says, "Always beat the average", and I'd be disappointing myself.
Or am I just a potential 99.95 student in denial...?
I've been thinking, is it really a good thing to do, or is it just putting unnecessary expectations on yourself?
For example, I combined the UMAX results with Table A2 - and critically evaluated myself, saying, "Okay, 11% of the students in English Advanced got Band 6s. Or around 3000 students with the median score at 80. Do I place myself in the top 3000?" I said, 'No', and put in 87 as a guesstimate.
Then I did it for the rest. So I got:
ADV - 87, EX1 - 90, EX2 - 93, MX1 - 95, MX2 - 94, CHM - 88, PHY - 88, LGL - 92
That gave me 98.70.
Then I thought that seemed too high and so I put what I would probably get on a bad day.
ADV - 84, EX1 - 87, EX2 - 90, MX1 - 90, MX2 - 91, CHM - 86, PHY - 85, LGL - 88
That gave me 97.25.
Which still seems too high. Then I plugged in the median numbers from Table A2 and I got 93.10.
Then I plugged in what I thought I could get if I tried really, really, really hard.
ADV - 92, EX1 - 94, EX2 - 96, MX1 - 97, MX2 - 97, CHM - 94, PHY - 94, LGL - 97.
And I got... 99.95.
So I'm a bit confuzzled. Is this a good idea to play around with it, or am I just placing unnecessary stress on myself?
Sure, at standard I 'should' get 93.10, but that'd mean if I get lower, I'm below the state average and as my Physics teacher says, "Always beat the average", and I'd be disappointing myself.
Or am I just a potential 99.95 student in denial...?