synthesisFR
afterhscivemostlybeentrollingdonttakeitsrsly
lemme re try it one last time
i think thats good
looks good to meguys I think I got it
can someone check tho it looks sus
We are in high schoolHere is a quicker way:
skill issue bud.We are in high school
So there's this dude from Harvard University, Lars AhlforsHere is a quicker way:
Where did you get this information?in last years ext 1 hsc people were still awarded marks for using the cross product
you’re kinda gambling tbh, in theory yeah you will be marked as correct however i’d advise to stay within the syllabus where possible. if you do use out of syllabus methods it would be a good idea to justify all the theorems you use to the best you can (which also is often much more tedious than just doing hsc methods), for example pretty sure people last year were marked down for using the cross product because they didn’t give enough reasoning, yeah it’s silly but it happens. whereas hsc methods are gonna be a safer bet, sometimes the longer way around but you’ll know for sure the marker cant mark u down for insufficient reasoning. eg if you’re using complex logs you’ll have to go through the whole reasoning as to how they work, what the integral is etc to be sure you’ll secure the marks. of course they may be lenient but there’s no telling and that’s kind of the issuesurely if we use out of syllabus methods a competent examiner will give us full marks for it. like in this question for example if someone used tywebbs solution or even a contour integral we should be awarded full marks. iirc in last years ext 1 hsc people were still awarded marks for using the cross product rather than the intended method so whats the difference here?
I would like to see an official source comment on the use of out of syllabus methods. Intuitively, I struggle to believe there is much truth to the acceptance of such approaches as it creates all sorts of problems when trying to mark equitably. At best you likely need to derive these "out of syllabus" results from scratch using HSC syllabus methods before you utilise them.surely if we use out of syllabus methods a competent examiner will give us full marks for it. like in this question for example if someone used tywebbs solution or even a contour integral we should be awarded full marks. iirc in last years ext 1 hsc people were still awarded marks for using the cross product rather than the intended method so whats the difference here?
It came from senior marker in HSC Ext. 1 on HSC Feedback Day 2024. He said cross product method would be accepted because the question said "or otherwise". It's not really any more complicated than that.Where did you get this information?
its basically simultaneous equations they used here using a property lmfao. Don't be too worried about the looks. The complex number solution given here is out of syllabus.oh my fuck what is this question
is this what im gonna be doing in the future i can't keep rawdogging math anymore omg
Also i'm curious as to where you learnt 'rawdog' from, because the way you used it seems rather/VERY concerning. (I'm assuming you may have learnt it from schoolmates without knowing its real connotations?)oh my fuck what is this question
is this what im gonna be doing in the future i can't keep rawdogging math anymore omg
thanks, idk where i got it from but ik what it means lolAlso i'm curious as to where you learnt 'rawdog' from, because the way you used it seems rather/VERY concerning. (I'm assuming you may have learnt it from schoolmates without knowing its real connotations?)