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James Ruse Agricultural High is again the top NSW school for the 22nd year in a row but Sydney Girls' is back in the top-10 at number four and independent girls' school Ascham is the only non-selective school in this year's list of best performers.
Fort Street Street has jumped 9 places to make it to number 12 in this year's HSC list. Photo: Janie Barrett
Australia's oldest selective school, Fort Street High, has jumped 18 places in two years to put it in 12th place on this year's list of top HSC schools. It climbed from 30th in 2015 to 21st last year and then landed just outside the top-10 in 2017.
Fort Street also was the star performer when it came to the number of courses it topped, with four students taking first place in six subjects.
As expected, the top-10 list is dominated by selective schools, including Baulkham Hills High, as well as North Sydney Boys and Girls, and the private selective school, Sydney Grammar.
The cut-off to make the top-10 schools list has continued to intensify in 2017 and has never been harder to crack, according to results dating back to 2010.
To make this year's cut-off, a school needed a success rate (the number of band 6s/E4s as a percentage of entries) of 48.94 per cent, compared to 46.52 per cent last year.
Moriah College is another big improver in 2017, moving from 27th to 15th place, while Knox Grammar has climbed nine places from 28th spot to 19th.
Pymble Ladies College is up 11 places to 20th this year, while PLC Croydon jumped from 36th to 21st.
The top-50 schools are exclusively made up of selective schools (either partially or full) and non-government schools.
When it comes to comprehensive public schools, Cheltenham Girls was again the best performer, coming in at 53rd in the state, the same result as last year.
Cheltenham Girls was followed by Willoughby Girls (61st), Cherrybrook Technology High (68th), Killara (78th) and Carlingford (79th).
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