from what i understand youre ranked against your peers in the state but your rank is now comparable to the ranks of those in other states.is this only going to rank people in NSW or the whole of Australia?
Because you know so much about people on BoS.None of you were going to get a 100 UAI anyway so it doesn't matter.
okay thanks, i was like ohh sweet my rankings might not matter!!!!!!! haha.They don't mean anything weird by it.
They're just trying to emphasise that your marks in Year 7 and Year 10 won't have any impact on your ATAR.
That was what i was wondering about too... i mean i understand that you'll only be ranked aganist your state and the rank (ATAR) would be the same in every other state. but how can that be equally fair if some states have an 'easier' cirriculum (i put 'easier' in quote marks because the content may not be any harder, just less. or vice verca: same or more content but the content is easier).Is this not ridiculously unfair for NSW students?
If the other states don't have as hard and complex material to learn, then they could for example get a 99.95 ATAR with half the amount of effort that people in NSW put in, and yet be ranked the same.
I hope im wrong.
Uhmm, that's the point. With the exception of Queensland (with their OP system), every course that previously required a UAI will now have an equivalent ATAR cut off.99.95 ATAR is not the same as 99.95 ENTER, or whatever some other system is used in a different state, is it? How do Universities judge, knowing the courses are different in each state?
.That was what i was wondering about too... i mean i understand that you'll only be ranked aganist your state and the rank (ATAR) would be the same in every other state. but how can that be equally fair if some states have an 'easier' cirriculum (i put 'easier' in quote marks because the content may not be any harder, just less. or vice verca: same or more content but the content is easier).
ATAR = fail without a national cirriculum.
No.Am I right in feeling that in SOME way, this new system is going to affect my results in a bad way?
The other states are using ATAR as well. And a 99.95 in NSW is considered equivalent to a 99.95 anywhere else. Before 100 in NSW was considered the same as 99.95. Put simply, up to 99.75 in UAI gets bumped down in ATAR, but only 50 or so kids state wide really get affected by this in terms of a lower ATAR. Despite this, they can still get into any Uni Course they want with 99.75 so it doesn't matter. Between 99.7 and 99.15 the ATAR = UAI, and after that point ATAR> UAI in increasing levels. The lower at the top is due to the capping at 99.95. As only 45-50 people can have each rank, a few people get shunted down. As I repeated before. This only affects about 50 people that get 99.75+ statewide and will not jeopardize their uni results in any way. The higher at the bottom is due to ATAR being calculated relative to your Year 7 cohort rather than the Year 10 cohort. So the dropkicks that left before Year 10 get added to the stack at the bottom. As it it highly unlikely that such people would have gotten a 90+ UAI it affects the bottom a lot more than the top. Once again, it's similar to the 100 UAI kids all getting affected, then small amounts of 99.95 kids, then smaller amoiunts of 99.9 kids and smalleramounts of kids until no kids get pushed down after 99.75 ATAR. Similarly, stacking the extra dropkicks from Year 7 majorly affects the bottom kids, but as the ATAR rises the effect on kids gets less and less, just that because there's so many of them the effect of the ATAR change filters through till 99.15 UAI, whereas because there's only 23 100 kids, the negative effect only filters through to 99.75. Between these two values, UAI = ATAR.99.95 ATAR is not the same as 99.95 ENTER, or whatever some other system is used in a different state, is it? How do Universities judge, knowing the courses are different in each state?
You are still ranked against NSW students only.
Students from each State are only ranked against their own State.
The difference is that ranks will be directly comparable between States - that is, 99.95 in NSW will mean exactly the same as 99.95 in Victoria, etc - and the rank will be called the same thing everywhere - as opposed to "Universities Admission Index" (UAI) in NSW and "Equivalent National Tertiary Entrance Rank" (ENTER) in Victoria.
Just wait for the official announcement guys, there's no need to fret.