Petition - ATAR Should Not Affect University Options (1 Viewer)

bangladesh

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It really isn't
ASIFFF.. There is no limit as to how many people can receive a 45/45.. They just have to be higher than a certain threshold where as students are compared against one another in ATAR
 

madharris

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ASIFFF.. There is no limit as to how many people can receive a 45/45.. They just have to be higher than a certain threshold where as students are compared against one another in ATAR
The content is a lot more demanding and difficult though, and the amount of work both acedemically and through extra curriculars is significantly more as well!
Just because everyone has a chance of getting 45/45 doesn't mean they do.
 

Crobat

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You could argue why do scientifically inclined kids have to do english when they can already speak English.

I think the sciences are so important in society and in the future they will only get even more important but the population as a whole has such a poor grasp and appreciation of them. Too many people fear them. While it wont necessarily make people like it itll certainly make them more well balanced overall (isnt that what we want from an education system to produce well rounded students)

But the thread idea is great. Should everyone just get into the course that they want? Ignoring university resources/costs/persons aptitude for the course etc etc
I don't agree with you a lot, but this is in that 1% of times that I do agree with you.

We want to raise government awareness about how the education system is limiting individuals, and gain university support for alternate entry pathways based on individuals who make a difference in their community and prepare themselves to follow their passions.
Interesting model - it sounds like you are saying there should be a mandatory community service part of the HSC. I have nothing against a suggestion like that since the main idea behind those things are to raise social awareness (and awareness in general) in teenagers which is always a good thing to do (and something that is highly encouraged at uni too). But considering you are already given the option to choose your own subjects in the HSC and, if you really were passionate about those subjects, you have the ability to do well in them and still get into uni, not really sure what the problem is beyond piss-poor syllabuses.

Personally I've always just thought of the HSC as a poor but necessary game of determination; i.e. if you aren't willing to play one of the easiest games you'll ever have to play to get what you want, you don't really deserve to get what you want. We've already seen what happens to the graduate market if you uncap limits on degrees (spoilers it's a fucking nightmare across all industries besides medicine pretty much) so if we were to just let everyone do what they want it'd be a lot worse for the economy for one, and for all graduates in the long run.
 

bangladesh

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The content is a lot more demanding and difficult though, and the amount of work both acedemically and through extra curriculars is significantly more as well!
Just because everyone has a chance of getting 45/45 doesn't mean they do.
I accept that the content is a lot more demanding in GENERAL. But i strongly think that all the kids who achieve atars of 99.5+ have a very good shot at getting 45. I completely understand that not everyone gets 45; but overall, i still strongly believe that achieving a 45/45 is much much much easier than achieving 99.95.
 

Crobat

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1. BS. almost all subjects in the HSC requires students to communicate their thoughts and responses to the question, so its actually stupid when people use this argument constantly as if english is the ONLY subject out there that builds up communication skills. At most, it builds up literature analysis skills, which pales in comparison to the power of learning science or mathematics in terms of making a substantial societal contribution. tell me how many literature texts it took to fully analyse and BS about to construct structures and devices that improve our lifestyles or the livelihoods of others?
True, but not in the same way that English demands it to be done - by developing an argument. Being able to write an answer is not the same as being able to develop an answer. It is true that the benefits of maths and sciences to not just society but the world at large will always be astronomical in comparison to what benefits you can gain from English, but to say that the skills you learn from English can be found in as substantial an amount in the other subjects that are by nature based in theorems based on laws and factual/logical analysis (where as English is based on your ability to 1. Demonstrate your independent and autonomous critical analysis skills and 2. present your critical analysis substantially) is ludicrous.

2. there's senior science and environmental science available for a less rigourous science-based courses other than your typical phys, chem and bio. there's also different levels of maths, such as general, advanced mathematics, MX1 and MX2. Just like English. With your argument, maths has been introduced into our education systems since kindy, yet why isn't that mandatory?? and also, people have varying degrees of ability in English, just like maths and science, so by your logic, mandating english isn't too great either.
I agree that mandating general maths and senior science would be a good move for society overall. At the very least, English shouldn't have to count as 2 units out of 10 towards your ATAR.
 

rumbleroar

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True, but not in the same way that English demands it to be done - by developing an argument. Being able to write an answer is not the same as being able to develop an answer. It is true that the benefits of maths and sciences to not just society but the world at large will always be astronomical in comparison to what benefits you can gain from English, but to say that the skills you learn from English can be found in as substantial an amount in the other subjects that are by nature based in theorems based on laws and factual/logical analysis (where as English is based on your ability to 1. Demonstrate your independent and autonomous critical analysis skills and 2. present your critical analysis substantially) is ludicrous.



I agree that mandating general maths and senior science would be a good move for society overall. At the very least, English shouldn't have to count as 2 units out of 10 towards your ATAR.
I'm not completely disregarding the benefits of English, but I feel the current system of developing autonomous critical thinking skills is stifling at best. Nowadays, the HSC English course breeds essay memorisation - where's the critical thinking in that? It's not really independent if we regurgitate other people's essays. I think if we adopted more SAT-style English courses, such as writing essays on topical concerns like, what is the importance of technology on family or something (bad example) it would be a much better course because it focuses on our relationship with society much more, and how critical essays should be written because the spontaneity of the topics meAns students are less reliant on memorisation, but rather proficiency of critical skill.

However I feel this discussion is sidelining from the actual topic haha which I will say as a response to it:
Without ATARs, how else would you standardise university entrances? Although the ATAR system has it's limitations, it's probably the fairest way of determining who gets in and who doesn't.
 
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Kiraken

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Tbh (kinda on topic) I have always considered why some courses don't have additional requirements other than ATAR

I feel as if interviews and such would be pretty useful for degrees such as law etc. To gauge the type of students who are really prepared for it and also a means of highlighting the importance of communication skills

Would appreciate input from students doing degrees such as law etc. But other degrees too

(might have to check responses tomorrow as im sleepy as hell and only came back on cos I noticed this thread and some interesting discussion laced with the odd post by ppl who have nfi what they are talking about)
 

isildurrrr1

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I accept that the content is a lot more demanding in GENERAL. But i strongly think that all the kids who achieve atars of 99.5+ have a very good shot at getting 45. I completely understand that not everyone gets 45; but overall, i still strongly believe that achieving a 45/45 is much much much easier than achieving 99.95.
Easy getting 45 on IB... HAH.

Have fun doing 120 hours of community service. have fun writing a 1200-1600 word essay on the theory of fucking knowledge. Don't think it's easy because it's a low word count, it makes it MUCH MUCH HARDER.

The thing is with IB you have to be well rounded in practically EVERY AREA. Have fun juggling learning a language, VERY advanced sciences, maths, language, humanities etc.

I've done US AP program before and it's supposedly the equivalent of first year uni work (Language, US History and Statistics for me). It is not easy at all, taking more than 3 AP classes a year is SERIOUS amount of workload already. Compared to IB, where every course is practically intro uni level stuff for 6 courses, it's not easy at all.

This is the reason why IB kids get scaled specifically. IB is that much harder, way more effort than the HSC. Nobody can ever get high marks, no matter how smart they are in IB without busting their ass.
 

isildurrrr1

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Tbh (kinda on topic) I have always considered why some courses don't have additional requirements other than ATAR

It just becomes gaming the system and too much ambiguity. The US uni system is a nightmare. Top marks don't guarantee shit. They don't have an ATAR system just purely GPA HS results and every high school grades differently. I know people who came to my High School had to drop a grade lower because they couldn't keep up with our content. It actually put us on a disadvantage because it just makes our students look dumb.

It's retarded getting 18 year old kids to write personal statements about their life struggles and what not when realistically they don't have one. It just becomes so much more about gaming the system than actually performing well. People end up making false claims about their extracurriculars just to be in line with everyone else whose making shit up. "President of club i just fucking made up so it pads my resume" sort of shit happens all the time.
 

nerdasdasd

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you've got to be fucking kidding me. It's SO MUCH easier to score a 45/45 in IB than it is to get 99.95
You gotta be joking, I won't bother posting the reasons why, as they have been posted p.
 

Fiction

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1. BS. almost all subjects in the HSC requires students to communicate their thoughts and responses to the question, so its actually stupid when people use this argument constantly as if english is the ONLY subject out there that builds up communication skills. At most, it builds up literature analysis skills, which pales in comparison to the power of learning science or mathematics in terms of making a substantial societal contribution. tell me how many literature texts it took to fully analyse and BS about to construct structures and devices that improve our lifestyles or the livelihoods of others?

2. there's senior science and environmental science available for a less rigourous science-based courses other than your typical phys, chem and bio. there's also different levels of maths, such as general, advanced mathematics, MX1 and MX2. Just like English. With your argument, maths has been introduced into our education systems since kindy, yet why isn't that mandatory?? and also, people have varying degrees of ability in English, just like maths and science, so by your logic, mandating english isn't too great either.

I argue for at least general maths to be mandatory. The functional skills from gen math are actually extremely applicable to real life, and students should be able to choose whether or not they want to go up. the biggest deterrent from picking maths is the suffocating structure of the syllabus. the entire syllabus needs reform if any subject should be mandatory.
I'm not completely disregarding the benefits of English, but I feel the current system of developing autonomous critical thinking skills is stifling at best. Nowadays, the HSC English course breeds essay memorisation - where's the critical thinking in that? It's not really independent if we regurgitate other people's essays. I think if we adopted more SAT-style English courses, such as writing essays on topical concerns like, what is the importance of technology on family or something (bad example) it would be a much better course because it focuses on our relationship with society much more, and how critical essays should be written because the spontaneity of the topics meAns students are less reliant on memorisation, but rather proficiency of critical skill.

However I feel this discussion is sidelining from the actual topic haha which I will say as a response to it:
Without ATARs, how else would you standardise university entrances? Although the ATAR system has it's limitations, it's probably the fairest way of determining who gets in and who doesn't.
1. a) Argueably language is a scientific device.
b) that's kinda your opinion lol. Using the right language, and knowing how to use the right language is used occupations along with various other knowledge/fields. E.g, councellors, other medical fields that treat mental disorders. You can't just claim that language is complete bs, that science and maths oh so betters our society etc, because may I ask you, how does year 11 and 12 maths and science better our society? University english is apparently nothing like HSC english, your argument is based upon university maths and science, therefore not plausible. To argue so would also be to completely disregard professions such as philosophers who ponder and write essays, not experiments, essays.

You do art, I'm surprised you haven't done an essay on "what is art and it's function" yet. If you have, then those literary texts which may seem like mere entertainment for you is actually vital in our society. And I don't just mean by capalitistic/profitable means.

I could also argue that science and maths is simply regurgitating facts, it does not further critical or logical thinking in the way english does.


2. I never argued that eng should be mandatory. I'm simply saying that if any one subject were to be mandated, eng would prolly be the best option. Based off your argument, maths should be mandatory because it was taught since kindy. The average person speaks like, at least 6 hours a day? The average person works on how many math questions a day?

Mandating maths and science, means that 6 units of the compulsory 10 are already taken up. This gives kids very little opportunity to chose other courses for lack of time, so idk. It would certainly help those who were already thinkingo f taking up maths and science subjects, but what about the more humanities or arts centered? You can take up to 14 units without too much morning classes etc, (2 morning classes and 2 hours a week after school, at least for me) so that leaves 8 units. The average person only would take 10-12 units for the hsc though. Idk. 6 compulsory units seems like a lot, when senior school is meant to "specialise" / "free choice" etc :/


First of all, how would your new model prevent students from memorising and regurigitating essay?

There's a flaw to every system, you can't expect a course to run perfectly. Like someone has mentioned, the HSC is like a game, there are various ways around it. I could argue that you can't actually memorise an essay for Eng, you need to adapt a memorised essay to the question. Failure to do so = not answering the question. Ability to adapt and mould arguments with set contextual evidence is part of what builds the critical and logical thinking.
 

rumbleroar

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1. a) Argueably language is a scientific device.
b) that's kinda your opinion lol. Using the right language, and knowing how to use the right language is used occupations along with various other knowledge/fields. E.g, councellors, other medical fields that treat mental disorders. You can't just claim that language is complete bs, that science and maths oh so betters our society etc, because may I ask you, how does year 11 and 12 maths and science better our society? University english is apparently nothing like HSC english, your argument is based upon university maths and science, therefore not plausible. To argue so would also be to completely disregard professions such as philosophers who ponder and write essays, not experiments, essays.

You do art, I'm surprised you haven't done an essay on "what is art and it's function" yet. If you have, then those literary texts which may seem like mere entertainment for you is actually vital in our society. And I don't just mean by capalitistic/profitable means.

I could also argue that science and maths is simply regurgitating facts, it does not further critical or logical thinking in the way english does.


2. I never argued that eng should be mandatory. I'm simply saying that if any one subject were to be mandated, eng would prolly be the best option. Based off your argument, maths should be mandatory because it was taught since kindy. The average person speaks like, at least 6 hours a day? The average person works on how many math questions a day?

Mandating maths and science, means that 6 units of the compulsory 10 are already taken up. This gives kids very little opportunity to chose other courses for lack of time, so idk. It would certainly help those who were already thinkingo f taking up maths and science subjects, but what about the more humanities or arts centered? You can take up to 14 units without too much morning classes etc, (2 morning classes and 2 hours a week after school, at least for me) so that leaves 8 units. The average person only would take 10-12 units for the hsc though. Idk. 6 compulsory units seems like a lot, when senior school is meant to "specialise" / "free choice" etc :/


First of all, how would your new model prevent students from memorising and regurigitating essay?

There's a flaw to every system, you can't expect a course to run perfectly. Like someone has mentioned, the HSC is like a game, there are various ways around it. I could argue that you can't actually memorise an essay for Eng, you need to adapt a memorised essay to the question. Failure to do so = not answering the question. Ability to adapt and mould arguments with set contextual evidence is part of what builds the critical and logical thinking.
1. As you've stated, it is my opinion and we can agree to disagree how much we value literature. I didn't say LANGUAGE was BS. I think language is actually vbbbbessential for basic human function. I was moreso referring to analysing literature as kinda BS lol. Also we aren't talking about university maths, science or English. We're keeping it in the frame of HSC and imo, the skills learnt in maths and science during the hsc are more important than knowing how to analyse literature. Knowing how to solve problems creatively (math) and understanding the basic systems of how things happen (science) to me is more vital.

I don't see how me doing art is relevant to the topic of contention...?

Maths does require high levels of logical thinking. Think about it, you're given a problem and you need to deconstruct it logically to give you a result. I think maths and English tests differing sides of logical and critical thinking. You can't devalue maths to just memorisation of formulas, etc. this may be my personal bias from doing it, but it does challenge you creatively. As for science, I can't fully argue for it because I don't do HSC science anymore but I found it challenged how you understood our current systems of knowledge and function.

2. You're looking at different areas of English. If we speak that much a day, shouldn't the entire HSC be based on oral examinations? Because who writes 6 hours a day? Maths isn't purely about doing questions, but rather how we approach a problem.

I never advocated for mandating science and maths together, just at least general maths because it teaches the basic skills necessary.

3. Well, if you've seen the SAT questions, you they're all spontaneous and there's not really any room for memorisation because you don't know what topic you will be asked. No model is perfect, of course. But I think that style of exams for English is better than our current one.
 

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literature is essentially creative philosophy and the formation of ideas and thoughts on a page, which is by no means unimportant
 

Kiraken

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It just becomes gaming the system and too much ambiguity. The US uni system is a nightmare. Top marks don't guarantee shit. They don't have an ATAR system just purely GPA HS results and every high school grades differently. I know people who came to my High School had to drop a grade lower because they couldn't keep up with our content. It actually put us on a disadvantage because it just makes our students look dumb.

It's retarded getting 18 year old kids to write personal statements about their life struggles and what not when realistically they don't have one. It just becomes so much more about gaming the system than actually performing well. People end up making false claims about their extracurriculars just to be in line with everyone else whose making shit up. "President of club i just fucking made up so it pads my resume" sort of shit happens all the time.
what do you mean by gaming the system btw? As in making false claims?
 

celadoncity

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1. BS. almost all subjects in the HSC requires students to communicate their thoughts and responses to the question, so its actually stupid when people use this argument constantly as if english is the ONLY subject out there that builds up communication skills. At most, it builds up literature analysis skills, which pales in comparison to the power of learning science or mathematics in terms of making a substantial societal contribution. tell me how many literature texts it took to fully analyse and BS about to construct structures and devices that improve our lifestyles or the livelihoods of others?
Yeah I agree with this. I'm not from NSW and here English isn't compulsory (I did it anyway cos I needed it as a prereq.), but as long as you do a subject that requires some form of essay writing or written communication (so, stuff like economics, history, sociology, etc. are included) you get it ticked on your school cert that you're 'literate'. (There's a similar system with maths so even if it's chem, physics, economics or accounting - you're deemed 'numerate').
I did two essay writing subjects including English, and I got way more out of the other one in terms of constructing an argument/written communication. There's more to critical thinking than picking apart texts, so I don't think English per se should be compulsory.

And I definitely agree that if English (or a similar subject) is to be made compulsory then a science subject of some description also should be. I get that obviously it isn't for everyone but scientific illiteracy is so bad (and has the potential to cause a lot of harm in society) that it probably merits rewriting an entirely new course just to cover basic stuff that everyone should know, rather than making people who really don't want to do chemistry or physics or bio or whatever.
 
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Remember that the purpose of ATAR is to choose your studies according to what you are interested in, what you are good at, and what studies you might need for future study.
 

nerdasdasd

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Remember that the purpose of ATAR is to choose your studies according to what you are interested in, what you are good at, and what studies you might need for future study.
That isn't what people do .... People chose the hard subjects for scaling.

Parents also pressure kids into doing certain subjects as they think "x" or "y" is useless.
 

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