Best schools for trial papers?? (1 Viewer)

mmmm.

Active Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2019
Messages
286
Gender
Male
HSC
2020
What are some schools which have good trial papers/would recommend for these subjects:
- Adv Maths
- Bio
- Modern History
- Business Studies
 

queenb_3

Active Member
Joined
Sep 7, 2019
Messages
319
Gender
Female
HSC
2020
Uni Grad
2025
What are some schools which have good trial papers/would recommend for these subjects:
- Adv Maths
- Bio
- Modern History
- Business Studies
In relation to Business Studies, I suggest the Catholic Secondary Schools Association of NSW (CSSA) papers.
 

#RoadTo31Atar

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2019
Messages
322
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2020
Do you guys think that the top ranking schools' papers are harder than HSC papers will be or no?

For adv math I think the 2019 HSC paper is easier and has less questions than the trials ive tried but idk if that's actually true or if it just seems harder to me.
 

CM_Tutor

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Mar 11, 2004
Messages
2,642
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Do you guys think that the top ranking schools' papers are harder than HSC papers will be or no?

For adv math I think the 2019 HSC paper is easier and has less questions than the trials ive tried but idk if that's actually true or if it just seems harder to me.
Yes.

The purpose of an exam is to rank those who do it from first to last. A question that no one can do is not worth asking because it simply reduces the number of marks available for separating students into a ranking order. A question that everyone can do is similarly useless in an assessment sense, though such a question at the start to get everyone "settled" (so to speak) may be included.

An HSC has to rank every student in the state (a population) whereas a school assessment needs to rank only a sample of that population (being the students at that school). Thus, a school assessment should be tailored to the characteristics of the sample. If a school has 100 students sitting an exam and 40 of them will score an ATAR of 99+, 70 of them will be 95+, and 95 of them will be 90+ (say), then the sample's average academic performance is much higher than that of the population. Setting an "average" exam could well mean that there are 70 students to rank who scored 75%+, making some of them difficult to distinguish from others. If the average is reduced to 60% (say) by asking harder questions, the spread of results is likely greater and thus the ranking order easier to distinguish.

For essay-based assessments, the same effect can be achieved by setting marking criteria that are more severe than would be used if the same question were asked in an HSC exam.

In short, the more able you are in a subject at your school, the more important that it is to seek out challenging material, and most especially if you are atypical of the sample and so have assessments that are easy when compared against your capability.
 

#RoadTo31Atar

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2019
Messages
322
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2020
Yes.

The purpose of an exam is to rank those who do it from first to last. A question that no one can do is not worth asking because it simply reduces the number of marks available for separating students into a ranking order. A question that everyone can do is similarly useless in an assessment sense, though such a question at the start to get everyone "settled" (so to speak) may be included.

An HSC has to rank every student in the state (a population) whereas a school assessment needs to rank only a sample of that population (being the students at that school). Thus, a school assessment should be tailored to the characteristics of the sample. If a school has 100 students sitting an exam and 40 of them will score an ATAR of 99+, 70 of them will be 95+, and 95 of them will be 90+ (say), then the sample's average academic performance is much higher than that of the population. Setting an "average" exam could well mean that there are 70 students to rank who scored 75%+, making some of them difficult to distinguish from others. If the average is reduced to 60% (say) by asking harder questions, the spread of results is likely greater and thus the ranking order easier to distinguish.

For essay-based assessments, the same effect can be achieved by setting marking criteria that are more severe than would be used if the same question were asked in an HSC exam.

In short, the more able you are in a subject at your school, the more important that it is to seek out challenging material, and most especially if you are atypical of the sample and so have assessments that are easy when compared against your capability.
Thank you
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top