You are misinformed. It is certainly possible to get a band 6 in English (Standard), it's just that the strength of the candidature is not high enough to achieve it. There would be more of the less talented students at English taking English (Standard) which means very few people get high marks because they are simply typically less talented than the students of English (Advanced). The performance descriptors for a band 6 in English (Standard) are exactly the same as the performance descriptors for a band 6 in English (Advanced). Thus, getting a band 6 in English (Standard) should be equally as difficult as getting a band 6 in English (Advanced). Since the quality of the students is generally higher in English (Advanced) than in English (Standard), this explains why there is a lower number of band 6 results in English (Standard) than in English (Advanced), based on the same performance descriptors.Jameswilmot2000 said:From what I understand there is actually quite an important distinction between Standard and Advanced - my English teacher informs me that it is very hard, nearly impossible to get a band 6 in Standard English.
That is not true. Practically NONE of the university courses (in any NSW university) require a specialised English course as a prerequisite. There are only a small handful of course that have English (Advanced) as ASSUMED KNOWLEDGE. Note the difference between prerequisite and assumed knowledge.Jameswilmot2000 said:Also some courses at uni have Advanced English as a prerequisite ... thats why I did Advanced.
Prerequisite means it is pretty much mandatory for a student to take that course in order to gain entrance. Very few courses have particular HSC courses as prerequisites.
Assumed knowledge means that the students taking that course are assumed to have some extent of knowledge of a particular HSC course. Students can still gain entry into the course if they have not completed a HSC course that is deemed as assumed knowledge in that particular university course.