Right. What if you are simply incompatible with your teacher's method of teaching? What if your teacher is just a BAD teacher (and trust, there are plenty).i dont see the point of tutors, if your not smart enough to understand something through school and study, then you shouldent be doing that class.
the HSC is ment to asses you, not your tutor.
That's not entirely true. At my school, there are reserve A's who get higher marks than the ones who got in easily. (Have you considered the fact that some reserves may have bombed out in tests? 'Reserves' are for the kids who didn't get the entry mark but have the potential to succeed well in a selective school) In addition, there are even students who don't get into either OC or selective, but they still manage to get higher UAI's then selective + OC students.Another thing is 1/2 of the students come from OC classes. These are the better group. They are highest performers since grade 4. The other half is a mix of the OC rejects and those who did not bother going for OC classes. This second group is generally lower ability. The entrance score is between 195 - 280. There is a big correlation between the entry score and actually performance at selective schools. Most of the students who only scrape in (through waiting lists) struggle badly to get high marks.
Nope... There are some kids who get 3 years + of coaching, but they don't get into selective schools. By just going coaching, it does not guarantee you entry into a selective school. For students to get coached for entry into selective school, it is to train them to be more familiar with the types of questions that are going to be asked and to realise the potential that they have. You have to also realise that the questions for Maths in coaching school was also year 8 work in year 6. The kids who can cope with these questions, are actually quite talented.Still the fact that so many kids get coaching to enter selective schools disturb me. And they seem to lose steam if they stop going to coaching. It's an unclear area. As I said atthe beginning that we should not count the really smart kids. These kids are too smart even for their teachers so they would do well without coaching. The question remained why the majority of the kids still need tutoring or coaching to stay competitive.
You have to be quite smart to enter the top 5... otherwise, everyone would be able to get into Ruse with perseverance and hardwork!Some selective schools are at the bottom of the league and could not even compare with good non-selective schools. So it depends. My nieces are in Sydney Girls where they say the low marks are about 70% and the average is about 80% for tests and essays. The top 5 selective schools in Sydney are very good. And you don't have to be extremely smart to enter a 5th ranked selective school.
So I do believe that some kids in selective schools outside the top 5 are dumb arses.
then what do u do?i dont see the point of tutors, if your not smart enough to understand something through school and study, then you shouldent be doing that class.
the HSC is ment to asses you, not your tutor.
It's a complex thing. It's what they call "rise to the challenge". Some smart kids are always near the top of every school that they move to. If you put the kid in a poor school, the kid will be at the top. If you move the kid to a top school, the kid will try to rise to the top. Kids also their friends too.then what do u do?
e.g. i may be 30th in my school for something but if i was in ruse i might be 120th...and i'd probably work harder if i was.
good on you mate i was in the same situation as you but i didnt go to a selective school and ended up with a good uai...basically its great that you dont need extra help on your studiescan I just say that I have never had a tutor (and never intend on getting one) and I am in a selective high school.
virtually everyone around me has a tutor for at least one subject, and it is quite annoying. i put in the extra work knowing I have noone to rely on if I dont udnerstand something. i have been doing extremely well even in the selective environment without a tutor/coaching college, and I am proud of myself for it.
i'd like to come out of year 12 and say that you dont need a tutor to gain a good UAI. in my opinion, i think that people in selective high schools are tutored because they were tutored to get into the school in the first place and they dont have an ability to work independently and find strength within themselves to actually do the work!
to be honest, I think that attending a coaching school/having a tutor shows that you are unmotivated/unwilling to strive to achieve your personal best, and will do anything to look better and achieve better marks, even if it means relying on others to push you over the line.
but dont get me wrong - if you are totally atrocious at a subject, and ARE putting in everything you possibly can, THEN a tutor may be an option. but if you just get a tutor for the sake of it, to improve your marks when you are not putting in the effort, then I find that ridiculous. (please note, I am mainly talking about students from selective high schools).
Agreedlol, firstly, some teachers at school arent that great, sometimes the information they teach can be very shallow or even incorrect. anyone disagree?
so, tutoring provides students with a second opinion, and something they can compare learnt information to, otherwise you would just assume everything yur teacher teaches is correct.
as for self learning, just reading from the textbook does not work, as the textbook is not interactive. eg. you cant ask a textbook for clarification or ask it to solve a particularly hard problem.
secondly, going to tutoring in the first place is a discipline thing, while other kids are out playing footy (no offence to footy players) other kids might spend their time looking at math examples at a tutoring centre, improving their maths.
thirdly, a kid who goes to tutoring would effectively be learning the HSC course twice. who thinks thats not advantageous?
+ they would be also doing twice the amount of homework (if not more) than students who dont go to a tutoring centre.
fourth-ly? people seem to think that the only FAIR way to learn is through school teachers. so what happens if a school teacher spoonfeeds his/her class? (eg. teaching them how to best answer a particular style of question) would this be unfair to students who have a 'better teacher' who DOESNT spoonfeed them? if not, then whats wrong with hiring an extra teacher?
i doubt that anyone who has been to tutoring will tell you that it had been a waste of time, most people who tutor-bash sound frustrated that it is actualli quite efficient at allowing kids to produce higher results than non-tutored kids
ok, so maybe memorising a pre written response that someone else has come up with should be frowned upon, but that applies mostli just for humanities subjects.
wat.. are you going to memorise a pre-written math equation?
even if nobody went to a tutor and everything was 'fair', i doubt that it would stay that way for long, just human nature to get ahead of everyone, the systems never fair
but anyway, no kids never 'need' tutoring, but it sure helps those who do it get into a course they want.
This.I agree with redbread, most students go to tutoring for the advantage of learning the course twice, deepening their understanding.
Incorrect. I was a reserve for Ryde Secondary, yet I managed to score well in Geography and History and even get at least average for the grade in all my subjects. My friend was also a reserve for Ryde Secondary, and today he is coming within the top 10 of the school.Most of the students who only scrape in (through waiting lists) struggle badly to get high marks.
Ryde is a shit selective school though. I also was a reserve student for Ryde and I managed to perform quite well, I guess.Incorrect. I was a reserve for Ryde Secondary, yet I managed to score well in Geography and History and even get at least average for the grade in all my subjects. My friend was also a reserve for Ryde Secondary, and today he is coming within the top 10 of the school.
My class was the class that was the 'reserve' class in terms of determining where the students would go to. Initially, we didn't perform as well as the 'offer' class in a lot of subjects except Geography, however as years passed by, half of the students in the reserve class did better than the offer class and the average marks were rising every year for the 'reserve' class. Then later, me as a reserve for Ryde Secondary, managed to top the grade in Geography for the 1st semester, and then come 2nd for the 2nd semester (my other reserve friend came first in 2nd semester =P).
So afterall, that's not true because there are always hardworking and intelligent people in different groups, yet they may have just missed out for a straight offer for a Selective class.
Source: personal experience.
lol learning software imo is terrible. anything involving learning on pc -> procrastination e.g. facebook since internet is only one click awayThe money spent on tutoring would be better spent on revision guides, and perhaps learning software.
lol. seriouslyAnd, to those students reading this who do get tutoring, I hope you're happy with the fact that there's a good chance I'd do better than you, anyway.