Anyone know what scores I would need in Unit 3/4 Bus man to get a 50?
Callum,
I also took Business Management 3/4 in Year 11. I didn't get a 50 for Business, so take this all with a grain of salt, but:
Firstly, never give up. I was told a few weeks before the exam that the highest score that I could realistically achieve would be a ~42. I ended up with a 48. So my first piece of advice is this: trust yourself, and believe in yourself. My SAC scores were pretty bland (though I did have the #1 rank, which is important), but my exam performance must have been decent. I guess the point here is that SAC results, whilst important, are difficult to use to estimate study scores. My brother had much better SAC results than me, but achieved a lower study score.
In hindsight, I didn't study particularly effectively - I studied a lot, but not well. So my second piece of advice is to try to get on to practice exams as soon as you're familiar and confident with the content. In fact, perhaps even earlier. There's no harm in doing practice exams more than once.
48 in Business is the highest I know of at your school (though, this may have (and hopefully has) changed in the last year or two). But there is
absolutely no reason that you can't beat it. Possibly the biggest mistake that I made in Year 11 was not aiming for a 50, so you're already ahead of where I was.
Best of luck!
EDIT:
Sacs don't matter that much it's all about the exam... blah blah
If you want a 50, regardless of the exam or sacs you should be devoting countless nights studying and improving your knowledge and skills in business management. Do not be mislead and think sacs dont matter, compared to the exam, they dont matter it's true, BUT it may be the different between that 39 and 40, or that 49 and 50. So, the best grades you should be looking for to attain a 50, I would say is 95%-100% on sacs, and absolutely perfecting your responses in exam-style questions.
Good luck!
And I don't disagree with this post apart from the "you should be devoting countless nights studying" bit. If you study effectively, you won't need to be spending countless nights studying. Studying too much is highly counter-productive to the ultimate goal (a study score of 50 in your case), especially if it comes at the cost of sleep.