You will probably have heard this countless times if you haven't already, and that is, it is the quality of your study time that determines your academic results much more than the quantity of your study time, you should give us a brief overview of what you intend to complete within those 7 hours of studying to allow us to make a better suggestion on whether you are doing an adequate amount of work to achieve your ATAR goal.Just wondering how good is 7? I dont do this.
It depends how many hours you need. On school nights I can get 4-6 hours done (includes homework, occasional social media checks), depending on how many free periods or how I feel. Weekends are often a lot more. But if I go out, I usually only do 3-4 hours. There's no "right" amount. Again, it depends on how many you need and what you classify as "study".On average, how much do you study per day? e.g. how many hours?
For me, it varies but usually around 3. Is that enough?
I don't think it could be that smooth sailing hahaThe amount you need to study is inversely proportional to your intelligence and proportional to your ATAR goal/cut off.
i.e. it's different for everyone.
maybe i could study 1 hr a day and get 99, and someone else might study 5 hours and get 80.
Don't do easy homework if you already can do it. I think 4 is a bit much.It depends how many hours you need. On school nights I can get 4-6 hours done (includes homework, occasional social media checks), depending on how many free periods or how I feel. Weekends are often a lot more. But if I go out, I usually only do 3-4 hours. There's no "right" amount. Again, it depends on how many you need and what you classify as "study".
there are many people who finish much of the course before the year even begins. i reckon they could do 1 hour a day (of concentrated study) and get 99. the kids who would probably get 99.95 or close to it if they gave it their all.I don't think it could be that smooth sailing haha
Natural aptitude and intelligence is one thing, but honestly, you can be very smart and not do well in the HSC. The HSC isn't a straightforward intelligence test. There's a huge variety of factors and stuff involved. Hard work and consistency is a much more likely factor contributing ATAR success. I know very smart people who worked extremely hard to get 99+.