suchet_i
derka derka
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2005
- Messages
- 127
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2006
i know a guy who turned 20 4 months before his hsc, any one older?
Well the oldest I know of, and it might be the one you are referring to, was in his late 80s when he did the HSC via OTEN(correspondence TAFE) and that was in 03 or 04.simbim21 said:ive heard of someone who was around 80. it was on the news a couple of years ago.
and yes bookie, i realised that you changed your location, now where's my medal?
80 ?! o_o whats there to live for after that? lol probably the persons last wish i guess..simbim21 said:ive heard of someone who was around 80. it was on the news a couple of years ago.
and yes bookie, i realised that you changed your location, now where's my medal?
i think his institutionalized lolXcarvengerX said:A guy in my year has repeated year 11 three times and now my math teacher having a bet of I think few dollars with one of my friend that he will repeat year 12 at least twice. So far, his attendance at school is less than 25%, and I don't know why he is still at school.
Liar.XcarvengerX said:A guy in my year has repeated year 11 three times and now my math teacher having a bet of I think few dollars with one of my friend that he will repeat year 12 at least twice. So far, his attendance at school is less than 25%, and I don't know why he is still at school.
Why? The school do not kick him out because it's government school not private school. and while he is there, he comes first in legal studies and economics in year 11. (obviously after 3 years of year 11, but still that's not easy to do). He always went overseas because of some reasons and coming back after 3 months.Liar.
It could be a point of pride, they just want their HSC plus they want a learning experience. Otherwise there is university entrance - while there are plenty of other (faster) pathways into uni than HSC it also allows you to get used to an academic experience again.hopeles5ly said:lol i don't get what's the point =/
i can't believe the school would allow him to go overseas so much lol.XcarvengerX said:Why? The school do not kick him out because it's government school not private school. and while he is there, he comes first in legal studies and economics in year 11. (obviously after 3 years of year 11, but still that's not easy to do). He always went overseas because of some reasons and coming back after 3 months.
Consider Paul Cheung, a 12-year-old maths whiz and HSC student who reads voraciously and regards Charles Dickens as "just a bit too verbose for my liking". His parents were anxious not to stunt his social development by casting him prematurely from the playground into a joyless round of accelerated learning.
They carefully avoided out-of-school coaching and, considering his exceptional academic achievements, he has not needed it.
But when he scored 100per cent in the year 10 School Certificate mathematics exam - while in year 5 - they accepted they could no longer hold him back. "I don't feel weird around the other students - just a foot shorter. I have friends in all the years now," says Paul.
On Monday week, when the Sydney Technical High School student sits the mathematics extension 2 exam, he will be one of the youngest students to complete an HSC subject. Only two others - one 10 and the other 11, both sitting maths exams - will be younger.
Advertisement
AdvertisementFrom baby brainiacs to the 80-year-old gentleman sitting an exam in country NSW, there are 65,888 students preparing for the three-week HSC marathon starting with across-the-board English exams on Monday.
The figure is slightly down on last year's candidature of 66,279 students, a drop that the NSW Board of Studies attributes to the fact that "youth employment seems to be slightly up".
Of this year's group, 38,340 students - or roughly 60 per cent - are from public schools, and 25,897 attend private schools. Roughly 2.5per cent are at TAFE and 24 students are self-taught.
Apart from English, which is compulsory, the most popular subjects are, in order, mathematics, business studies, biology and studies of religion. Personal development, health and physical education, followed by ancient history, chemistry, modern history and physics round out the top 10.
By the time Paul has finished a few more of these for his HSC, he will be 14 - four years shy of legally drinking at a bar.
"I'd probably like to be a pure mathematician, but I don't know if that's really a career," he says.
His principal, Lynne Irvine, says: "He's a mature boy with a quirky sense of humour and he was immediately accepted."
A spokeswoman for the Board of Studies said schools had to present a "convincing argument for acceleration, including all earlier results".
The youngest student to sit a full HSC program this year is 15-year-old Emily Jones, from SCECGS Redlands, who said she "wouldn't label myself a nerd, a prodigy, any of that".
She is hoping to studying music at the Conservatorium of Music next year, followed by law: "I'll be young, so I have plenty of time to do two degrees."
http://community.boredofstudies.org/members/eafj90/The youngest student to sit a full HSC program this year is 15-year-old Emily Jones, from SCECGS Redlands, who said she "wouldn't label myself a nerd, a prodigy, any of that".