Dragonmaster262 said:
Thanks for clearing that up Lazarus. But suppose you came first internally in your school with 70%, and scored the top raw exam mark of 70% in your school. Is 70% the number which makes your UAI?
You have described this situation:
raw internal assessment mark = 70%
raw examination mark = 70%
The student is ranked absolute first internally and does not have an atypically low examination mark, so the student's initial moderated assessment mark will be the top raw examination mark:
initial moderated assessment mark = 70%
The student's raw HSC mark for the course is the average of the raw examination mark and the initial moderated assessment mark (which are both the same in this case):
raw HSC mark = 70%
This mark is scaled and the scaled mark contributes to the student's scaled aggregate and UAI.
Independently of all of the above, the raw examination mark and the initial moderated assessment mark are aligned to the course standards by the Board and reported as the aligned examination mark and aligned assessment mark respectively. The rounded average of those two marks is reported as the aligned HSC mark.
The Board does not use the term 'aligned' in its reports because it wants students (and everyone else) to focus on the final standards-referenced result.