Title: The HSC Year at Knox
1The HSC Year at Knox
2What do we expect of you in your HSC Year?
- In your HSC Year, we expect
- Commitment to academic success in all subjects.
- Attendance at all classes, all assessment tasks
completed and all course requirements completed. - Homework 3 hours plus study, 6 nights per week
- At least 18-21 hours of homework and study per
week - At least 3 hours of homework per 2 unit course
- Targeted and focused use of all study periods to
support this homework loading - Sport and involvement in the full life of the
School. - Leadership
- Positions
- Leadership by example
3- The Structure of Senior Study Preliminary, HSC,
Units, Extension, Assessment, UAI, Scaling
4The HSC Year
- HSC Course Term 4 Year 11 to Term 4 Year 12
- HSC Assessment begins in Term 4 Year 11
52 Unit HSC Courses
- All HSC courses have a unit value
- Most courses are 2 Units
- 2 Units 9 periods per 2 weeks 120 hours
per year 100 marks
61 Unit Extension HSC Courses
- Extension courses build on the content of the
related 2 Unit course and are set at a more
challenging level - English and Mathematics have Extension 1 courses
in the Preliminary Course you may choose a 3rd
unit in each of them - English and Mathematics have Extension 1 and
Extension 2 in the HSC Course you may choose a
3rd and 4th unit in each of them
71 Unit Extension HSC Courses (Ctd)
- Indonesian, German, Japanese, French and Music 2
have Extension Courses in the HSC Course you
may choose a 3rd unit in each of them - Ancient History and Modern History have Extension
History in the HSC course you may choose a 3rd
unit in either AH or MH but not both
8Understanding Your Results
- At the end of your HSC examinations, you will
receive - Examination Marks
- Assessment Marks
- HSC marks
- A scaled UAI
- What do these terms mean?
9Definitions
- The School Assessment Mark the mark submitted by
the School to the Board of Studies showing a
students performance in the schools Assessment
Program in a course. - The Assessment Mark the mark that appears on the
HSC Record of Achievement showing a students
performance in the schools Assessment Program in
a course.
10Definitions (Ctd)
- The Examination Mark the mark that appears on
the HSC Record of Achievement showing a students
performance in the HSC Examination in a course. - The HSC Mark the average of the HSC and
Assessment Mark in a course. This also appears
on the HSC Record of Achievement. - The Universities Admissions Index (UAI) a number
which shows the students rank in the state in
terms of overall performance for the purposes of
university entry.
11Calculating the School Assessment Mark
- Students complete Assessment Tasks in the
schools Assessment Program. - A total Assessment mark for each student is
calculated by adding together the marks from all
Assessment Tasks according to the weightings
prescribed in the Assessment Program. - This mark is sent to the Board of Studies (BoS)
after the Trial HSC Examinations. - Students are not told their School Assessment
Mark, but may ask for their school rank at the
end of the HSC Examination period.
12Calculating the Assessment Mark
- The BoS looks at all of the School Assessment
Marks in a course. - The BoS preserves the schools rank order but
moderates (adjusts) the mark ranges in the school
to match the level of achievement of the school
in the HSC Examination. - This corrects the effects of Assessment marking
which is too hard or too soft.
13Calculating the Assessment Mark (Ctd)
- Usually
- Top exam mark top HSC Assessment Mark
- Total school HSC Examination Marks total school
HSC Assessment Marks - The BoS may also exercise professional judgement
in adjusting the gaps between students. - Therefore the mark that appears on the HSC Record
of Achievement is usually different from the mark
that the school sends in. - However, this mark does reflect a students
performance in Assessment Tasks moderated against
the schools performance in the HSC Examinations.
14The Examination Mark
- Students sit the HSC Examination and their
scripts are marked. - The raw marks of the whole state are adjusted by
judges to fit the standards bands - A certain range of raw marks corresponds to each
band. Judges decide where the cut-off marks apply
according to the standards achieved. - The raw marks allocated to a band are stretched
over the 10 marks of the band. - The rank order of the raw marks is preserved.
- The adjusted Examination Mark appears on the HSC
Record of Achievement, showing the standard
achieved by the students examination responses.
15Bands
- Bands divide student performance into different
standards of achievement. - Bands are reported as mark ranges.
- Band 6 90-100, Band 5 80-89, Band 4 70-79,
Band 3 60-69, Band 2 50-59, Band 1 0-49 - Bands are also reported as verbal statements of
outcomes. Achieving a mark within a band
indicates for students in that mark range what
they typically know and can do.
16The HSC Mark
- This is the average of the Examination and
Assessment Marks. - The HSC Mark is reported against a band of
achievement to help students know their standard
of achievement. - The HSC Mark is used by UAC to calculate the UAI.
17Universities Admissions Index
- The UAI is a number which gives a rank in the
state for tertiary entrance purposes it is
based on a special scaling of your HSC marks by
the Universities Admissions Centre - The UAI is one way of measuring academic
achievement in the HSC - The UAI is not a mark
- Most students at Knox would aim for a UAI
18Universities Admissions Index (Ctd)
- To be eligible for a UAI, you must
- Complete at least 10 Units of Board Developed
Courses including at least 2 Units of English - Complete at least 3 courses of 2 Units or greater
- Complete at least 4 subjects
19Calculating the UAI
- The UAI is calculated by adding together the
scaled HSC Marks of a students best 10 units. - This best 10 units includes at least 2 units of
English and no more than 2 units of Category B
subjects (Industrial Technology and TAFE/VET
courses). - The resulting marks out of 500 for all qualifying
students in the state are ranked. - This rank is reported as a percentile number,
rounded to units of 0.05. - UAC does not report individual subject scaled
marks nor the components of individual UAIs.
20Calculating the UAI (Ctd)
- A UAI of 92.15 means that the student
- performed better than 92.15 of the state
- came in the top 7.85 of the state
- It is not possible to calculate a UAI simply by
adding up the marks that appear on the HSC Record
of Achievement. This is because the the marks
that appear on the HSC Record of Achievement are
not scaled.
21What is Scaling?
- Scaling is the way that UAC adjusts marks to
reflect the average academic quality of the
candidature in an HSC course. - Scaling ensures that students are neither
advantaged nor disadvantaged by taking so-called
harder or easier courses. (Report on Scaling
1999 HSC) - Scaling is redone each year previous years
scaling is not necessarily indicative of scaling
for 2003.
22Scaling 2 Unit Subjects
- All 2 Unit courses are scaled in the same way.
- HSC Marks for students in a course are given an
initial average of 50 and spread out over a
normal bell curve. - The average and shape of the bell curve is then
adjusted to compensate for average academic
quality of the candidature. - The rank order from the raw HSC marks stays the
same.
23Scaling Extension Subjects
- UAC looks at the shape of the curve formed by the
results of the Extension 1 students in the 2 Unit
course (or courses in the case of Extension
History). - This pattern ( average) is used to determine the
shape of the bell curve in Extension 1. - Extension 2s relationship to Extension 1 is
similar. - The average academic quality of the candidature
in Extension subjects is usually higher.
24Variable Top Marksand the UAI
- The highest possible mark per unit is 50/50.
- UAC will enable the top marks of courses where
the average academic quality of the candidature
is lower to drop below 50. - The formula for the variable top mark is that the
top mark will be 50/50 or 24 marks above the
average, whichever is the lower. - The top mark for each course is recalculated each
year.
25- Finalising Your Pattern of Study
26What are Your Goals?
- The Big Questions include
- Family?
- Career?
- Personal Growth?
- Location?
- No decision is finite all decisions help take
you to the next stage - Sometimes clear decisions are not yet possible
need for breadth
27Confirming Your Subjects
- You should maintain your study of subjects which
- You enjoy
- You want to study
- Support your goals, career aspirations and dreams
- Are relevant to you as an individual
- Are challenging and rewarding
- Provide you with balance
- Expect to study each of your subjects for the
whole HSC Year.
28I Know What Im Doing
- The decision is personal but
- Are you fully informed about the consequences of
your choices? - Are you making choices for the right reasons?
- Are you happy with your decision?
- Will your plan work?
29A Knox HSC Program
- Preliminary Course a minimum of 12 units you
are now doing this! - (You must satisfy the requirements of the
Preliminary Course before progression to the HSC
Course) - HSC Course we expect that most students will
continue with a program of 10-12 units some
students may choose an Extension course as a 13th
unit
30A Knox HSC Program (Ctd)
- In both Preliminary and HSC Courses, you must
include - At least 2 Units of a Board Developed English
Course - At least 6 Units of Board Developed Courses
- At least 3 courses of 2 Units value or greater
- At least 4 subjects (including English)
- No more than 6 Units of Science can count towards
HSC eligibility
31HSC Course Pattern A
- Steady as she goes
- Maintain current pattern of study and number of
units
32HSC Course Pattern B
- Replace one or more courses with one or more
Extension courses in - Mathematics
- English
- History
- Languages
- Music
- Extension in one of AH or MH but not both
- Extension 2 courses available to students taking
Extension 1 courses in English/Maths in both
Years 11 and 12
33HSC Course Pattern C
- Replace a 2 unit course with 1 new Extension
course - Change from 12 units to 11 units OR
- Change from 13 units to 12 units
- A few may discontinue 2 2 unit courses and
replace them with 2 Extension courses
34HSC Course Pattern D
- Discontinue a 2 unit course
- Change from 12 units to 10 units OR
- Change from 13 units to 11 units
35The Insurance Policy?
- Studying more than 10 units
- Do you need to keep extra units up your sleeve?
- Are you really committed to all your units?
- Research shows that the insurance policy usually
does not pay off most students mentally drop
the dead 2 units well in advance of the HSC
examinations average of 20/100 marks lower for
dead units across North Shore schools
36Scaling and Subject Choice
37Scaling and Subject Choice
38Scaling and Subject Choice
39The Process So Far
40The Process From Here