The teacher you had I believe is now on leave. There's only one Chem teacher in the school now, who I had last semester and he's good. Regardless, I'll have to study really hard in Methods and Chemistry because Maths isn't really my strong point and I don't hate Chem but it's not my favourite science. I thought I did quite well in my mid-year Chem exam but I only received 86%.
Is the Chemistry teacher new or are you guys lucky enough to get the lab technician? In regards to Methods, I found that doing all the homework set helped tremendously however in SACs and the exam, there were mainly worded questions and not straight equations. If you can find worded equations that are relevant to the topic, that would help you tremendously throughout the year because they get more complex than the equations given in the textbook.
That's really impressive! Do you speak Chinese at home? To be honest, I'm best at translations and I don't do well in orals because I never get the tones right! Because I speak Cantonese at home and never Mandarin so I sometimes use get the tones mixed up. I used to look forward to my VSL classes but once I got to high school, I started to lose motivation and I almost dread Saturdays now.
I'm multilingual so I speak a few languages at home. How is your written work? If you start on your oral early in the year, you can pretty much memorise the majority of your answers and can probably even prepare for questions that are unlikely to pop up to be extra prepared.
I dreaded Saturdays as well but I, along with the majority of my classmates, all despised Chinese school but it does pay off. The scaling is well worth it even if you have to sacrifice your Saturdays and stress about your assessments. An extra incentive is that you get a Baccalaureate title on your VCE certificate
