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    Secondary School Selection 2012

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Secondary Schools - Selection
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    • W Offline
      wonderm
      last edited by

      Chenonceau:
      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?

      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.

      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.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C Offline
        Chenonceau
        last edited by

        wonderm:
        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?

        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.

        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.

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        • J Offline
          jtoh
          last edited by

          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.

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          • W Offline
            wonderm
            last edited by

            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?

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            • P Offline
              Pen88n
              last edited by

              wonderm:
              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?

              But the mean is much higher, which results in a small difference between the kid's score and the mean score. So even with a lower standard deviation, it still results in a lower T-score overall.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • W Offline
                wonderm
                last edited by

                Pen88n:
                wonderm:

                [quote=\"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?

                But the mean is much higher, which results in a small difference between the kid's score and the mean score. So even with a lower standard deviation, it still results in a lower T-score overall.[/quote]Good point. But the fact that the mean is high means it is easier for the kid to score that particular score, right? I think we don't need to be overly worried about this stuff, just remember it is all about relative ranking.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • C Offline
                  Chenonceau
                  last edited by

                  slmkhoo:

                  That's so funny! I totally agree with you about wanting my life back - you voice my feelings exactly! I also try to leave my kids to manage by themselves, a little less for my older one with learning issues, but my younger one has had minimal intervention from very early on. But neither has asked to move out yet!
                  😄

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • C Offline
                    Chenonceau
                    last edited by

                    wonderm:

                    Good point. But the fact that the mean is high means it is easier for the kid to score that particular score, right? I think we don't need to be overly worried about this stuff, just remember it is all about relative ranking.

                    :rotflmao: My sentiments exactly... dun care lah... the time to affect results was before, not now. Whatever formula is used ... applies to the whole cohort.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • P Offline
                      Pam Pam
                      last edited by

                      hi all, i am new here : :oops:

                      My ds next year will go to Sec 1, need some advise which school is better:
                      1) Choa Chu Kang
                      2) Regent
                      3) Zheng Hua Sec
                      4) West Spring
                      5) Unity
                      6)Greendrige

                      Looking for your kindly advise.....
                      :thankyou:

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • N Offline
                        NY1969
                        last edited by

                        Pam Pam:
                        hi all, i am new here : :oops:

                        My ds next year will go to Sec 1, need some advise which school is better:
                        1) Choa Chu Kang
                        2) Regent
                        3) Zheng Hua Sec
                        4) West Spring
                        5) Unity
                        6)Greendrige

                        Looking for your kindly advise.....
                        :thankyou:
                        Would you consider Kranji Sec School? I heard its not bad. Entry level at COP of 230 up.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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