no not the exact same question but the exact same quesiton type. I nearly didn't pay attention to the parametric vector shit when kurt was showing this kinda q cos he said it was unlikely to come lolwdym. did nesa just recycle questions??
no not the exact same question but the exact same quesiton type. I nearly didn't pay attention to the parametric vector shit when kurt was showing this kinda q cos he said it was unlikely to come lolwdym. did nesa just recycle questions??
on this note actually seeing how good kurt and du is you should buy their resources!no not the exact same question but the exact same quesiton type. I nearly didn't pay attention to the parametric vector shit when kurt was showing this kinda q cos he said it was unlikely to come lol
wait for that did we need to consider 0<x<1were u unable to prove the x>ln(x) and the roots of unity? That's tuff.
bruv every single q in the paper has been used before in some context except maybe the last part of the last question - if you were super sweaty for 4u it's actually possible to get a very very high raw score in this paperalso question 15ai has been used before
that's actually a past hsc questionThe proof question in 16b was similar to a trial question a couple of years ago. Required same technique. NESA not very original.
what about 62-64?70 raw will get you 92-93 which is 99.95 territory. You did well.
I’d say that’s probably a high band e3 in this paper which is the equivalent of a ≈99.5 ATAR (depends a lot on how high though because the marks tend to fall off hard in the band 5 range)what about 62-64?
lol look up any question (trial, textbook, internet) related to equilateral triangles and complex numbers and you’ll find similar questions. It’s a pretty well known result. (PS: some version even appeared in past BoS trials).Just found Question 16 (a). In mastering HSC maths by jonathon Lee!!!!!!
I don’t think we should expect “originality” when it comes to Maths questions. Most questions you see are connected to some well known result. Otherwise, you rule out being asked to prove some famous/elegant results in maths. I actually think NESA is doing a pretty decent job in putting out questions that are unpredictable and not the same stuff everyone has seen before (which they used to do in the 2010s).The proof question in 16b was similar to a trial question a couple of years ago. Required same technique. NESA not very original.
i mean the 2022 and 2021 paper had unique questions, you probably can't find the harder questions in the past HSC papers or tutoring questions, they should atleast make the originality consistentlol look up any question (trial, textbook, internet) related to equilateral triangles and complex numbers and you’ll find similar questions. It’s a pretty well known result. (PS: some version even appeared in past BoS trials).
I don’t think we should expect “originality” when it comes to Maths questions. Most questions you see are connected to some well known result. Otherwise, you rule out being asked to prove some famous/elegant results in maths. I actually think NESA is doing a pretty decent job in putting out questions that are unpredictable and not the same stuff everyone has seen before (which they used to do in the 2010s).
ok thats not bad .... aggh i made some silly mistakes in my mc and i feel so devastated...I’d say that’s probably a high band 5 in this paper which is the equivalent of a ≈99.5 ATAR (depends a lot on how high though because the marks tend to fall off hard in the band 5 range)
i literally feel like its the end of the world lol... worked so hard for a year (i set a goal when i started this course that i would get e4) its gonna hurt so much when i get my marks back and see an e3 cuz i made some stupid mistakesok thats not bad .... aggh i made some silly mistakes in my mc and i feel so devastated...
@carrotsss or anyone else do you have any idea how harshly they mark the papers? I think I did alright (a bit worse than I’d hoped but fine) but there’s lots of marks they could’ve taken off if they feel like it (eg. Not proving the orientation of the vertices was correct for the parallelogram, using cover up rule for partial fractions) and some places I don’t know if I’d get partial credit (quite commonly in Q14 and 15). Just wondering because I feel like that literally could make a 10 mark difference in raw marks. Thank youI’d say that’s probably a high band 5 in this paper which is the equivalent of a ≈99.5 ATAR (depends a lot on how high though because the marks tend to fall off hard in the band 5 range)
I don’t have a perfect answer but what I will say is my mx2 teacher has marked the hsc (mx1 not mx2) and when I asked her to mark a paper at around the harshness she would in the hsc, it got me the same mark that I got when marking it myself, so it’s not like they mark it insanely harshly or anything like that. I’d say you’d get a decent amount of marks in most of those circumstances, so your raw mark would probably be on the higher end of your estimate@carrotsss or anyone else do you have any idea how harshly they mark the papers? I think I did alright (a bit worse than I’d hoped but fine) but there’s lots of marks they could’ve taken off if they feel like it (eg. Not proving the orientation of the vertices was correct for the parallelogram, using cover up rule for partial fractions) and some places I don’t know if I’d get partial credit (quite commonly in Q14 and 15). Just wondering because I feel like that literally could make a 10 mark difference in raw marks. Thank you
I think you have a different interpretation of “original” to mine. Like, with your interpretation I could argue the reduction formula Q15a)ii) was “original” because that technique isn’t a standard thing you find in that context and it makes you think. But I doubt many people would call that question “original”.i mean the 2022 and 2021 paper had unique questions, you probably can't find the harder questions in the past HSC papers or tutoring questions, they should atleast make the originality consistent
I mean of course they are connected to some well known results. But if you have seen the same type of question before you KNOW what result to apply, the difficulty with original 4u questions is the fact that you should have to think about how to approach the question (try various different approaches/results) rather than knowing it straight away.
Awesome, thanks mateI don’t have a perfect answer but what I will say is my mx2 teacher has marked the hsc (mx1 not mx2) and when I asked her to mark a paper at around the harshness she would in the hsc, it got me the same mark that I got when marking it myself, so it’s not like they mark it insanely harshly or anything like that. I’d say you’d get a decent amount of marks in most of those circumstances, so your raw mark would probably be on the higher end of your estimate