D94
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- Oct 5, 2011
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Physics and Chem have around 10000 each, so does Ancient History and Modern History. Bio has 15000, so does Business Studies. "Social sciences" aren't a discipline...it's actually HSIE or Humanities. In 2010, altogether, the Sciences had 41888 and the Humanities had 77819. Even if you just take the so called "Social sciences" (all Humanities except Ancient History, Modern History and History Extension), they still had 53488, which is still more than Science. Sure you can tell us that Geography and Economics are decreasing in numbers, but when you have Ancient, Modern and Business dominating the Humanities subjects and as well as SOR, it doesn't appear to a "different story". The fact is that the Sciences are being neglected; they are at a decrease in proportion to the increase in the state cohort.I don't understand the whole "science is being neglected" argument when Biology, Phys and Chem are all some of the most taken courses in the HSC, with around 10000+ in the candidature for the latter two and 15000 for Bio. Social sciences are a different story though - Geography has less than 5000 pretty consistently and there was a 10% decrease in the size of the Economics cohort this year.
As far as I'm concerned, it seems more like a tendency of people to "specialise" during the HSC - doing predominantly arts subjects/science subjects/humanities/social sciences without taking a broad range of subjects, but I don't see that the argument that science is dwindling has any merit whatsoever if you just simply look at the numbers.
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