Secondary School Selection 2012
-
But I thought the grades (A*, A etc) are allocated after the fitting into the bell curve and so the % should be roughly the same as the rest of the subjects. No meh?
-
slmkhoo:
Based on the statistics provided by wonderm, it must be for Chinese if 80% score A and above. But bear in mind that an A in school may be harder to score (if the school sets harder papers) than an A in PSLE.[/quote]But A does not mean above 75 and A* does not mean above 90. Last yr, my dd said she would not get above 91 in MT based on her performance but got an A* in all subjects including MT.
I dont think the national average for any subject will be 75%.ks2011:
[quote=\"alng\"]I am not trying to scare anyone here.

If a student gets average score for all the 4 subjects, his/her T-score will be exactly 200. If the average of 4 subjects is 75% (which I doubt for some subjects like Maths), then one really needs 4A to get a T score of 200!
-
Nebbermind:
But I thought the grades (A*, A etc) are allocated after the fitting into the bell curve and so the % should be roughly the same as the rest of the subjects. No meh?
Thats my understanding as well. -
Nebbermind:
But I thought the grades (A*, A etc) are allocated after the fitting into the bell curve and so the % should be roughly the same as the rest of the subjects. No meh?
It was a Minister who revealed that 80% of kids score A in Chinese. If this 80% is fact then the A are not fitted into bell curve. In essence, the A reflects raw score only. Uninformative. It would seem then that the A and B banding are stable 75 to 90 is A. No? -
The % for the rest of the subjects @ 43~44% seem to indicate that they are fitted into some models. But 80%...double!! Exempted from 'bell-curving'?
:scratchhead:
Some conspiracy theory? :scratchhead: -
Pen88n:
You are right, A or A* does not represent high T-score. I also think even the A and A* marks are not fixed judging from the mistakes my ds told me about and their PSLE grades. At the end of the day, we just need to know T-score shows their relative position within their cohort, it doesn't really matter how hard are the papers. Don't be scared
Getting a A or A* for Chinese does not guarantee the kid a high T-score for that subject. Imagine, if the mean is 80% and your kid score 81%, he will still get a A, but T-score for that subject is only 50.x even if it is a A. And yes, that means those with less than A will be scoring less than 50 for T-score for that subject. Sad and scary :nailbite: right???
-
Chenonceau:
I don't think the marks for A and A* are fixed. Despite the difference in difficulty levels of the papers over the years, the national % of A and A* for all subjects do not seem to change much. It is public information as it is shown on school websites every year.Nebbermind:
But I thought the grades (A*, A etc) are allocated after the fitting into the bell curve and so the % should be roughly the same as the rest of the subjects. No meh?
It was a Minister who revealed that 80% of kids score A in Chinese. If this 80% is fact then the A are not fitted into bell curve. In essence, the A reflects raw score only. Uninformative. It would seem then that the A and B banding are stable 75 to 90 is A. No?
http://www.nanhuapri.moe.edu.sg/cos/o.x?c=/wbn/pagetree&func=view&rid=32331
http://www.henryparkpri.moe.edu.sg/cos/o.x?c=/wbn/pagetree&func=view&rid=41039
Still, I don't know why Chinese has a much higher % of A and A*. In any case, T-score for each subject will still have a mean of 50. -
wonderm:
I don't think the marks for A and A* are fixed. Despite the difference in difficulty levels of the papers over the years, the national % of A and A* for all subjects do not seem to change much. It is public information as it is shown on school websites every year.Chenonceau:
[quote=\"Nebbermind\"]But I thought the grades (A*, A etc) are allocated after the fitting into the bell curve and so the % should be roughly the same as the rest of the subjects. No meh?
It was a Minister who revealed that 80% of kids score A in Chinese. If this 80% is fact then the A are not fitted into bell curve. In essence, the A reflects raw score only. Uninformative. It would seem then that the A and B banding are stable 75 to 90 is A. No?
http://www.nanhuapri.moe.edu.sg/cos/o.x?c=/wbn/pagetree&func=view&rid=32331
http://www.henryparkpri.moe.edu.sg/cos/o.x?c=/wbn/pagetree&func=view&rid=41039
Still, I don't know why Chinese has a much higher % of A and A*. In any case, T-score for each subject will still have a mean of 50.[/quote]Yeah... I agree. Though still stumped by the proportion for Chinese. -
Maybe more students do better in Chinese compared to other subjects, hence the higher proportion of A/A*. But it also means that if you score an A (a low A particularly), your T-score will be dragged down lower compared to if you had scored a low A in the other three subjects.
-
jtoh:
Maybe more students do better in Chinese compared to other subjects, hence the higher proportion of A/A*. But it also means that if you score an A (a low A particularly), your T-score will be dragged down lower compared to if you had scored a low A in the other three subjects.
I thought it is the other way round? For 2 bordreline A grades, the one with a smaller standard deviation will result in a higher T-score for that subject.
With more people scoring A and A*, the std deviation for that subject is smaller compared to another subject?
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better π
Register Login