As we know, VCAA is looking for a fair system, and a big consideration in that is how to compare vastly different subjects. For example, how can you really compare Visual Communication & Design, and Chemistry? Very difficult.
The idea is that the raw scores you receive don’t actually take into account how
difficult it was to achieve a mark in the middle of the cohort in various subjects. For clarity – and this is something VCTAC also stresses – by “difficulty”, I don’t mean how inherently difficult the subject is, or how hard the content is. After all, those are extremely subjective measures. Instead, “difficulty” here is measured by
competitiveness in the subject.
All Study Scores are scaled to adjust for the fact that it is more difficult to obtain a high Study Score in some studies than others. This is NOT because some studies are inherently harder than others. This IS because some studies attract a more competitive cohort of students than others.
[16]This is the reason that subject scaling changes a little from year to year: not because VCAA is arbitrarily changing its mind on how difficult subjects are, but based on varied competitiveness in subjects from cohort to cohort. There is nothing inherently about Specialist Maths that means it scales up, and it
could just as easily scale
down if the cohort were right. Similarly, Health & Human Development
could scale up if the cohort were right.
Now, how is “competitiveness” measured? Basically, by how well students in a particular subject do in their
other subjects. This might seem a bit counter-intuitive, but let me explain it in this way.
Say you’re going to compete in two different 100-metre races. In the first, you’re up against a bunch of slow, old, overweight non-athletes. In the second, you’re up against Usain Bolt, Tyson Gay, Yohan Blake, Asafa Powell, and a bunch of other professional sprinters. Neither of these races is inherently more difficult – they’re both simply a 100-metre running race. But the
competition is vastly different, thereby making it much easier to achieve a mid-place ranking in the first race than the second.
The competition, here, is determined by how well the competition does in their other races. So, Bolt, Gay, Blake, Powell etc. are, on average, going to do very, very well in their races; the non-athletes from the first race, probably not so much. The same sort of principle holds with the VCE system.
So, according to the
2017 scaling report, English Language scaled from a raw 30 to a scaled 33. To get to this point:
• We take all of the English Language students studying the subject that year.
• We look at how those students have performed in all of their
other subjects.
• We take whatever the EngLang students averaged in all of their other subjects, and that becomes the
new average for English Language.
• So, in this case, it was determined that the English Language cohort performed above the average by about three points, which is why the subject scaled up by three.
Equally, we could look at, say, Geography, which scaled from a raw 30 to a scaled 29.
• What we can extrapolate from this is Geography students, on average, scored a 29 for their
other subjects.
• And the average study score for Geography, therefore, has been scaled down by one to account for this below-average competition.
Some people see subject scaling as rewarding or punishing those taking certain subjects, but it’s simply not the case. All VCAA is doing is levelling the playing field. Without this scaling, those studying subjects where it’s more competitive and, therefore, more difficult to achieve a middle ranking, would be unfairly treated.
With this in mind, the best thing you can possibly do is to choose subjects you a) need as pre-requisites for your university course; b) are passionate about and enjoy; and c) are good at. There is no way to “game” the VCE system in this way.