Ragerunner
Your friendly HSC guide
The school plays no role in the determination of your UAI.
The UAC simply uses the marks given. There is no school scaling just because they are selective or private.
The only difference a school can make is the atmosphere around you and whether the competition within it is high, thus motivating you to do well.
In the end, you'd find that if you attended a very good selective school your ranking may not be that good. Conversely if you performed the same in another less acedemic school, your ranking would be better, thus 'cancelling' out the effect.
Ultimately, you'd find that in the end your marks you receive at school become moderated to ensure fairness throughout the state.
This thread that I made will explain the moderating procedure and you'd fine it's as fair as it can get so as to not disadvantage the student.
If you performed badly at school and the hsc exam in a top selective school your UAI won't be good. If you performed badly at a poor acedemic school your UAI won't be good.
It' just known that if you are performing well at a selective good, whilst beating the majority of the people in your class, you'd also perform very well in the HSC exam and end up with a nice UAI....If you performed equally in another school while attain the same HSC exam marks, you'd also end up with a nice UAI.
The school plays no part in how they calculate the UAI. They simply use the marks they are given after it has undergone moderation to ensure that the marks between all schools are fair.
The UAC simply uses the marks given. There is no school scaling just because they are selective or private.
The only difference a school can make is the atmosphere around you and whether the competition within it is high, thus motivating you to do well.
In the end, you'd find that if you attended a very good selective school your ranking may not be that good. Conversely if you performed the same in another less acedemic school, your ranking would be better, thus 'cancelling' out the effect.
Ultimately, you'd find that in the end your marks you receive at school become moderated to ensure fairness throughout the state.
This thread that I made will explain the moderating procedure and you'd fine it's as fair as it can get so as to not disadvantage the student.
If you performed badly at school and the hsc exam in a top selective school your UAI won't be good. If you performed badly at a poor acedemic school your UAI won't be good.
It' just known that if you are performing well at a selective good, whilst beating the majority of the people in your class, you'd also perform very well in the HSC exam and end up with a nice UAI....If you performed equally in another school while attain the same HSC exam marks, you'd also end up with a nice UAI.
The school plays no part in how they calculate the UAI. They simply use the marks they are given after it has undergone moderation to ensure that the marks between all schools are fair.