van.tango
Member
Re: Science Olympiads
Excellent. Thanks a lot SS. =)
Excellent. Thanks a lot SS. =)
I myself have no real experience, but training can be arranged with your school, I believe; that is more or less the procedure as my Head Teacher tells me. I'm not too sure, so I recommend you ask .PrettyVacant said:Hey Guys,
Just wondering if anyone is considering doing the entrance exam & if you're also doing training for it.
Well I'll need training. =D But I was also wondering how much commitment one would need to undertake "training" in 1, 2 or 3 sciences as "preparation" for the science olympiad exam? Would it severely affect schoolwork and study?
Anyone have any experience?
=) Thanks.
Now, this has been the thing that's been bugging me; my Head Teacher of Science says that for one to participate they should be in the Top 10 in the subjects, which is, of course, definitely extremely contested at my school, but oh yes, it's feasible, absolutely - even first is, nay, it's definite and fixed!Just wondering if anyone is considering doing the entrance exam & if you're also doing training for it.
Are you serious?LottoX said:Also, apparently if you represent Australia, you get + points into {sic} your UAI... Don't knwo {sic} for sure though.
Phys: http://www.jyu.fi/tdk/kastdk/olympiads/The AU ASO website said:Students competing the National Qualifying Examinations must be in year 11 or lower in 2007. To be eligible for consideration as an ASO scholar, students must:
* hold an Australian passport or be eligible to obtain one by March 2008;
* be under the age of twenty years in July of 2008; and
* not intend to enrol at a University before July 2008.
Schools are invited to nominate up to 5 students each in the Biology, Chemistry and Physics Examinations. Additional registrations may be accepted where it can be demonstrated that students have shown outstanding ability and commitment, for example through their involvement in extra-curricular preparation activities. Please contact the ASI office if you have students in this category.
Well, I'm not so sure on the meaning of training here, but I've done the HSC course for all sciences (the ones that are seen as sciences in the eyes of the mass), and sit in for lectures of all sorts quite regularly. If that's training, I guess; but I doubt it is.PrettyVacant said:if you're also doing training for it.
Re-answering now, should what I've done and what I do count as training, I'd say it's not that disruptive, and hardly as disruptive as the homework that I get from English and whatnot, and the extra-curricular activities that I do do.Would it severely affect schoolwork and study?
You, like anyone else, could have done it in Yr 7. I know that Ruse does it in earlier years, which is most depressing.SS said:No problem Sounds interesting, might've have tried out last year if I had any willpower back then.
Indeed, but at the level of knowledge I had back then, there would have been no need for me to apply and find out I was not going to go well in it.Lucid Scintilla said:You, like anyone else, could have done it in Yr 7. I know that Ruse does it in earlier years, which is most depressing.
Into your UAI just sounds not so right. However, there is no need to sound acerbic.LottoX said:Lucid, let me remind you that "into" is not spelt incorrectly. "knwo" was a typo though.
Why of course, how silly of me. We have science freaks at SBHS - year sevens discussing, let alone cracking intelligent, witty jokes about quantum physics, is never good for the State, for sure.SoulSearcher said:Indeed, but at the level of knowledge I had back then, there would have been no need for me to apply and find out I was not going to go well in it.
Yes, no; yo, nes.Kujah said:Is this for any school? it sounds really interesting
It's still good to try, I suppose.van.tango said:It is indeed for anyschool. I'd love to do it but I'd just rather not sit an exam and get a mark of 5 percent.
HAHA.LottoX said:I hold an intrinsic antipathy for all animadversion directed at my patois
=( *small vocabulary*LottoX said:I hold an intrinsic antipathy for all animadversion directed at my patois
hxc = hardcore.LottoX said:There was a Dr. Murdoch as North Sydney Boys... She was pedantic, but if you got on her nice side, she'd give you some hxc secrets.
Yeh, did them all last year, and found some rather challenging, while others easy-peasy-Chinesey/Japanesey. Also, I think that they only start from 2000 or something, so there aren't that many - but they'll keep you busy for a while.LottoX said:I know the content that you get taught after you've been informed that you're selected is 1st Year University level, but I'm not sure of the exams. The site should have past papers, at least I remember they had past papers.
http://www.aso.edu.au/www/index.cfm?itemid=31
=OLottoX said:I know the content that you get taught after you've been informed that you're selected is 1st Year University level, but I'm not sure of the exams. The site should have past papers, at least I remember they had past papers.
http://www.aso.edu.au/www/index.cfm?itemid=31