As someone who has been in both fully and partially selective schooling, I would have to heavily recommend fully selective.Hello,
Can you please advise how the environment in partial Selective school? Is the pressure in selective class there as the same as fully selective school?
Also I am after some HAST materials and tips.
Thank you.
Thank you I have PM you the email address. Since which year you switch from Partial to Fully selective? was the exam hard? How many candidates for how many spots?As someone who has been in both fully and partially selective schooling, I would have to heavily recommend fully selective.
For partially selective classes, you have to remember you're being given the same teachers as the public students, just being taught at an advanced rate - this by no means indicates that the standard of teaching is good. In my experience, it was far from it. There is far less pressure, but to the point where students are hardly encouraged to push themselves - it's an endless hypocritical loop of, "you're the selective class, you guys don't need to put in effort" which goes right back to "you should be pushing yourselves harder than the other classes" in the same breath. It is not a good environment. Not only that, but it's not even carried through to HSC - there is literally no point.
Maybe I do have some personal grievances regarding partially selective schools but... That is my experience.
Tell me your Email. I have HAST resources.
My brother in christ, the HSC is fricking standardised. tfym "harder content". It's all about the individual effort. Even if you manage to get in, if you're fucking retarded and do only humanities subjects, don't expect to get a higher atar than someone who did extension 2 math with band 6 in most subjects in a normal school.As someone who has been in both fully and partially selective schooling, I would have to heavily recommend fully selective.
For partially selective classes, you have to remember you're being given the same teachers as the public students, just being taught at an advanced rate - this by no means indicates that the standard of teaching is good. In my experience, it was far from it. There is far less pressure, but to the point where students are hardly encouraged to push themselves - it's an endless hypocritical loop of, "you're the selective class, you guys don't need to put in effort" which goes right back to "you should be pushing yourselves harder than the other classes" in the same breath. It is not a good environment. Not only that, but it's not even carried through to HSC - there is literally no point.
Maybe I do have some personal grievances regarding partially selective schools but... That is my experience.
Tell me your Email. I have HAST resources.
assessment moderation dipshitMy brother in christ, the HSC is fricking standardised. tfym "harder content". It's all about the individual effort. Even if you manage to get in, if you're fucking retarded and do only humanities subjects, don't expect to get a higher atar than someone who did extension 2 math with band 6 in most subjects in a normal school.
And? If you're top you will take the top marks, which was 99 and 97 in trials. Even the retards wont affect you cause its an average of the top two marksassessment moderation dipshit
if you rank 1st in the assessment, your assessment is given the 1st ranked hsc mark in your class, youre not given the top two marks unless your assessment mark is tiedAnd? If you're top you will take the top marks, which was 99 and 97 in trials. Even the retards wont affect you cause its an average of the top two marks
Generally speaking.And? If you're top you will take the top marks, which was 99 and 97 in trials. Even the retards wont affect you cause its an average of the top two marks
i think what they mean is that fully selective schools in general get harder internal tasks or even in junior years their exams are harder. if you've ever been in a comprehensive or partially selective school you'll know how easy the tests can be in comparison to a selective school exam. when moving to a fully selective school in y8 from a partially selective in y7 i would have been failing if i didn't go to tuition i didnt go to tuition bc they were doing geometry proving, trig, basic polynomials already. also in my current school they taught us the parts of the prelim modules for chem and physics in y10 itself so we would be prepared for y11. for people in schools with easier exams in junior grades they will find y11 and y12 significantly harder.My brother in christ, the HSC is fricking standardised. tfym "harder content". It's all about the individual effort. Even if you manage to get in, if you're fucking retarded and do only humanities subjects, don't expect to get a higher atar than someone who did extension 2 math with band 6 in most subjects in a normal school.
people do trial papers from the more prestigious selective schools for a reason. had a 10 mark difference between selective trial papers and my own schools trial papersi think what they mean is that fully selective schools in general get harder internal tasks or even in junior years their exams are harder. if you've ever been in a comprehensive or partially selective school you'll know how easy the tests can be in comparison to a selective school exam. when moving to a fully selective school in y8 from a partially selective in y7 i would have been failing if i didn't go to tuition i didnt go to tuition bc they were doing geometry proving, trig, basic polynomials already. also in my current school they taught us the parts of the prelim modules for chem and physics in y10 itself so we would be prepared for y11. for people in schools with easier exams in junior grades they will find y11 and y12 significantly harder.
also its not as simple as doing well as an individual. if im in a selective school and im like 3rd its not the end of the world bc ik my cohort will carry me and ik being 3rd internal probs will mean ill band 6. but if i go to a school ranked low being 3rd internally might not translate across to getting a band 6. its so much harder to get get a high atar in a low ranked school as opposed to a selective school. lots of factors like resources, teachers, funding to the school, low band 6 rate overall, not being able to afford material like textbook q's etc.
also yeah i agree humanities scale shit but only if you do shit in them. once you start getting a raw b6 in pretty much any subject it doesnt scale that bad. there are a few humanities that still scale down a bit but the diff between a 94 and a 95 hsc mark once scaled is not that deep for your atar ngl. since you're talking about selective schools, there are ppl that have graduated from my school with 95+ atars with mid 2u maths marks (maths didnt count towards atar bc it was their worst unit) and full on humanities and english ext. it does happen in selective schools bc they band 6'd everything and state ranked for a subject.
i also dont think you should chat shit about people doing only humanities subjects bc you're not writing their hsc for them. let them live and do whatever, and if you think they are going to flop, let them. keep your opinions to yourself
exactly, and ill also see a gap in marks if i do nsb/ruse paperspeople do trial papers from the more prestigious selective schools for a reason. had a 10 mark difference between selective trial papers and my own schools trial papers
I do them from them too. They are the same difficulty if your school buys trial papers from a good provider. Also all the selective papers are easier than hsc.people do trial papers from the more prestigious selective schools for a reason. had a 10 mark difference between selective trial papers and my own schools trial papers
are you actually in y12 doing internals?? bc generally selective trials papers are not easier than the hsc, they are often harder. literally anyone that is in y12 will tell you trials in general are modelled to be harder than hsc and often people score above their trial mark in the actual hscI do them from them too. They are the same difficulty if your school buys trial papers from a good provider. Also all the selective papers are easier than hsc.
also top selective schools dont buy papers and they dont look like bought papers either.I do them from them too. They are the same difficulty if your school buys trial papers from a good provider.
my school writes their own papers, we dont do cssa. also youre in year 11 why the fuck are you doing trial papers?I do them from them too. They are the same difficulty if your school buys trial papers from a good provider. Also all the selective papers are easier than hsc.
? untrue. For at least the context of E1 and E2 maths... Q14s notoriously get extremely hard. The trials for most selectives are relatively average all in all discluding maybe jrahs or nsb (2022 was really fked). The HSC brings in the newer trends. Trials replicate and therefore render them the 'easier' exams.trials are almost always harder than hsc
Just adding my 2-cents as a student at a partially-selective school (unfortunately), if I could turn back time I would've never let my mother pressure me into going to a closer partially-selective school. Not sure how it is for others, but here the student cohort is unbearably and freakishly divided into two factions (like it's not that serious, we're all losers going to the same trashy high school) all the time. Not worth it. And education-wise, it's probably not worth it either. Go fully selective.Hello,
Can you please advise how the environment in partial Selective school? Is the pressure in selective class there as the same as fully selective school?
Also I am after some HAST materials and tips.
Thank you.