There is no guarantee that all the spech kids will do well in further, and from experience with friends who did do both, they either did well in spech or further and rarely both.
Not sure exactly what you might define as doing 'well', but if you are talking about getting 45+ scaled scores, I think it is unfair for mathematicians to get 3 chances to have 2 really good Maths scores in their top 4, in addition to whatever the 3rd maths score was, while no other subject area really has this luxury.
How did these friends generally go in Methods?
BoredSatan has a point. You might only further discourage people from doing spesh, which is not desirable.
I hadn't actually thought of that - that there are perhaps people capable for either subject who already are choosing further over spesh.
I find it disheartening that these people knowingly chose the 'easier' subject just because it is 'more rewarding for their ATAR'. Surely it's a vote of disconfidence from themselves to themselves as much as anything, because if they can crack a raw 40 for spesh then their scaled score (40 --> 51) will be higher than even a 50 for Further.
Do you think that having a restriction, and effectively forcing these students to choose only one of Spesh or Further, would result in fewer boys doing Spesh (because they will pick Further)?
Previously I had thought that the best Maths kids would all just pick Spesh, but as BoredSatan wrote, it sounds like this would hardly be the case.
Regardless, the restriction would force boys to do a different subject in lieu of another maths. Especially with the Physics/Spesh similarities, a common Top 4 subject combination could be:
English/Lit/EL, Methods, Spesh, Physics
which I guess is fine, if quite similar.
Ultimately I suppose that I hope that a restriction on doing only one of Spesh or Further would mean that more students might choose to do more diverse subjects with that now vacant subject slot, as well as giving Further students more of a fair go. Hopefully that would make everyone happier