i'm not telling you@he1nl when was your birthday again?
i'm not telling you@he1nl when was your birthday again?
is that the reading texts bit before the essay? i havent done much lol since term 4 last year but will likely just know types of techniques and audience responses, its very skills based annoyinglyGuys how is everyone studying for the interpreting text part of English Paper 1? Im struggling a bit :/
uh dont think so, I don't even think they will bother looking at it because thats not what they're looking at your paper for. I know sometimes for essays, where they like it if a student has pre planned what they are gonna write about, but we wont get marks deducted if we don't do it.Just wondering, if you plan your answer in Trials / HSC by annotating the question, do the markers mark that? Can they mark you down if you’ve interpreted it incorrectly in your annotations?
idk but my bio teacher always told us to annotate our graphs coz ppl have gotten marks from just annotating graphs, idk about actual questionsJust wondering, if you plan your answer in Trials / HSC by annotating the question, do the markers mark that? Can they mark you down if you’ve interpreted it incorrectly in your annotations?
I second this. My bio teacher is a HSC marker and she says that they mark whatever is on the page (eg like a punnet square on side, observations). Not sure if it the same for English - but they definitely won't take away marks for any wrongly annotated observations - so long as these are corrected in your response/not included.idk but my bio teacher always told us to annotate our graphs coz ppl have gotten marks from just annotating graphs, idk about actual questions
yes, but you need to be sure not to contradict urself in ur reasoning for like science subjects such they can invalidate ur whole answer (according to my physics teacher)Don't markers only award marks, they don't take away marks? my interpretation was that you were awarded marks for things you got right but not taken for what you got wrong.
Thank you so much you are a beautiful personNormal distribution = Follows the 95-68-99 rule
The numbers represents the proportion of the population that fits under the standard deviations. For example, If you start to check on the most average of the population, and you see that 68% of the whole population fits around that category, and then you check on a broader category, and found out that 95% of the population fits that category, and then 99.7% fits the even broader category, this is a typical example of a normal distribution. Here's a pretty good example of it. View attachment 43407
Sample proportion = The proportion of the sample that successes, or meets certain conditions.
For example, you have a sample population of 50 people. You want to test how many of them have diabetes. Your test results indicates that 10 of them have diabetes. The sample proportion will be 10/50=0.2
You're welcomeThank you so much you are a beautiful person
I had some come to my old school and one girl thought it'd be fun to have about 12 relationships in the 1 month she was therebruh
your school gets exchange students???
That's insane but ig she never sees you guys again soI had some come to my old school and one girl thought it'd be fun to have about 12 relationships in the 1 month she was there
i think the exact opposite its gone by so fast hahaWhy is this HSC year soo fucking long it feels like I've been here for like 3 years
we are just too goodbruh we have almost the same subjects wth
Agreed. And it still feels so long away to me. You're telling me I need to grind all the way until the start of November?Why is this HSC year soo fucking long it feels like I've been here for like 3 years
The only thing getting me thru HSC year is the plans I have afterwardsAgreed. And it still feels so long away to me. You're telling me I need to grind all the way until the start of November?
cant wait for schoolies!!The only thing getting me thru HSC year is the plans I have afterwards