BillytheFIsh said:
But they'd still know roughly what to expect... just seems funny to be giving "honours" to the majority of people.
The breakdown is something like 90/70/55... How do first class honours mean anything if 40% of the graduands get them?
They derive their value from the simple fact that the award is based on the attaining of a certain mark rather than the filling of a quota. When I see a person awarded Class I honours, I know at once the standard achieved - insofar as such a standard can be measured by a weighted average mark. That
x number of students achieve the mark required to obtain Class I honours and that some people think
x to be excessive do not, in themselves, lower the standing of the award. Such a characterisation of
x does not consider the calibre of the cohort, generally, nor the difficulty of obtaining a WAM that falls within the standard specified.
The assumption appears to be that honours can only be significant if they are awarded relative to the cohort. However, Class I honours would actually mean
less if they were awarded to, say, the top 20% of graduates, because, in any given year, it is known that 20% of the cohort will obtain Class I honours, regardless of their performance relative to preceding years as measured by a WAM for a set of courses that do not significantly alter over the given time period. This entertains the possibility of people with WAMs of 67, 59.2 or 57.01 being awarded Class I honours, which would be absurd. Don't you agree?
Also - I've done my sums and there would be far more people graduating than the list names (the list would be most of the folks who started combined law in 2000, plus 2002 grad law intake plus randoms). So perhaps only the top students graduate in May and the rest do so in June? With the post graduate PhDs, LLMs and suchlike? This would alter the proportions of folks with Class I ...
Laurie: hello :wave: yes, I think that person with a WAM of 86.2 will be getting the medal. You are a bona fide genius, yes? Your reputation, sir, precedes you
I think this list is comprable to other years, but I know it is hard, very hard, hardy-McHardHard to keep up the WAM. Personally, at the end of first year, I had an HD WAM; at the end of second my WAM was just 85 and now it's dropped a couple of more points. But, that being said, you will probably get the medal in both science and maths. Luck duck.