I agree.
I haven't been following this thread so excuse me if anything I'm stating has already been stated before.
When exams start catering start catering towards those who don't rote learn I'm sure students will alter their studying methods accordingly once they find that bluntly memorizing the syllabus won't cut it. Right now (lol, I'm still in my junior years of high school so correct me if I'm wrong) most of our exams don't force us to think critically- all they require is knowledge of the syllabus , which is easiest acquired by rote learning. So a student who comes into an exam after having only memorized the syllabus content before (doable in just a day) will most often (speaking from my personal experience) do just as well, and sometimes even better than a student who has spent their whole year paying attention in class trying to understand the concepts behind the theory. In cases like these it is quite off-putting to know that all this effort you've put in this subject has acquired you the same mark as someone who you know hasn't tried half as hard as you.
(oh but then there are those who actually love learning which is great and all... but when it comes to exams like the HSC where your future is at risk why spend ample time and effort trying to understand the basis of a formula when its application is entirely possible without it? )
Students won't give up rote learning for the sake of learning. They need incentive to do so , and what better way to do that than to construct our exams around critical thinking (I think this is already being done? I don't know).
You misunderstand the point of this thread, I never denied that rote learning can get you good marks for most subjects. The fact that this is true is WHY it needs to change. If students find out that rote learning will no longer help them, then they switch to understanding which is better for the purpose of education and better for society as a whole. There will still exist stubborn rote learners but in the end they should always get mediocre compared to those willing to learn.
The incentive to give up rote learning is marks - And to create such an incentive the syllabus needs to change/or the exam style must change. In English, 3 long responses in 2 hours will make rote learning seem a more attractive option. In Chemistry less emphasis on social impacts/socio-economics will greatly help people who try to understand.
I haven't followed the thread but so far i guess everyone believes rote learning is bad and i would agree but here's my take on it.
HSC is a game.
As simple as the statement is, it is true. You do the HSC to gain entry you don't necessarily care about the concepts (most students anyway). Like i agree that it should be more concept based exams and there is a slow transition towards that in exams, but there's so many ways you can re-invent the wheel before you start changing the actual syllabus. I'm quite sure a few member here would agree that at some stage during the HSC they would of been thankful the papers were similar to what they had rote learn.
Again a misunderstanding of the purpose of this thread, I do not deny the truth of that statement. But that is the reason why it must change, it defeats the whole purpose of education.
Every time I get an exam paper extremely similar to what I have seen before, I am not happy. Why? Because I don't learn anything. And the exam then becomes piss easy and its hard for me to stand out.