|
此文章由 zjrlisa 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 zjrlisa 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
本帖最后由 zjrlisa 于 2013-12-18 13:15 编辑
lotus1993 发表于 2013-12-18 08:35 ![](static/image/common/back.gif)
恭喜各位!
问个小白问题:
我也小白,上官网看了看,有点意思。还是老规矩,有band。。。
How the HSC mark is calculated
The HSC mark is a 50:50 combination of a student’s examination mark and school-based assessment mark for each course.
Assessment mark
School-based assessment tasks measure performance in a wider range of course outcomes than can be tested in an external examination. Students are required to complete a number of assessment tasks for their courses. This may include tests, written or oral assignments, practical activities, fieldwork and projects. Schools submit an HSC assessment mark for every student in every course. The Board puts the marks through a process of moderation to allow a fair comparison of marks in each course across different schools. Read more about the moderation process.
Examination mark
The examination mark for each course shows the student's performance in the HSC examination for that course, which was set and marked by the Board of Studies NSW. The examination consists of a written paper and, for some courses, speaking and listening examinations, practical examinations, or major works that are submitted for external marking. Each student's achievement is assessed and reported against set standards of performance.
A unique part of the standards approach is a special procedure called 'judging'. Judging means a student’s raw exam marks can be matched to the standards and the reporting scale used by the Board. It means a student is rewarded for their performance with the mark they deserve, no matter how many other people performed at a similar, higher, or lower level. Read more about judging and applying the standards.
Performance band
Student performance in each HSC course is measured against defined standards. HSC marks for each course are divided into bands and each band aligns with a description of a typical performance by a student within that mark range. The performance bands and descriptions give meaning to the HSC mark. For a 2 unit course, Band 6 indicates the highest level of performance and the minimum standard expected is 50.
Band 6 = 90 - 100 marks
Band 5 = 80 - 89 marks
Band 4 = 70 - 79 marks
Band 3 = 60 - 69 marks
Band 2 = 50 - 59 marks
Band 1 = 0 - 49 marks
Each band is aligned to what a student at that level of performance typically knows, understands and can do. The 'average' performance in most courses is usually a mark in the mid-70s (Band 4). Band 1 indicates that a student has not met enough of the course outcomes for a report to be made. Band 1 includes marks ranging from 0 to 49. For an Extension course, the bands are E4 (highest level of performance) to E1.
http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.ed ... ing.html#calculated |
|