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The NSW Higher School Certificate Information for Year 10 Students and Parents


The NSW HSC

  • The Higher School Certificate (HSC) is the highest educational award you can gain in New South Wales schools.
  • The HSC:
    • is an internationally recognised credential
    • provides a strong foundation for the future
    • is standards-based. Students receive HSC marks that indicate the standard they have achieved.

Board Developed Course (BDC) and Board Endorsed Course (BEC)

Board Developed Course

  • HSC exam
  • counts towards HSC
  • may count towards the ATAR*
  • includes some VET** courses
  • includes Life Skills courses

Board Endorsed Course

  • no HSC exam – school-based assessment used
  • counts towards HSC
  • cannot contribute to the ATAR
  • includes some VET courses

* Australian Tertiary Admission Rank
** Vocational Education and Training


HSC Course Structure

  • All courses in the HSC have a unit value
  • Most courses are 2 units
  • 2 units = 4 hours of instruction per week
    120 hours per yea
    = 100 marks
  • 1 unit = 60 hours per year
    = 50 marks
  • All 2-unit HSC courses have equal status

Requirements for the HSC

  • Preliminary Course
    • minimum of 12 units
    • students must satisfactorily complete the Preliminary course before commencing the corresponding HSC course
  • HSC Course
    • minimum of 10 units

Requirements for the HSC

Both the Preliminary and HSC Courses must include:

  • At least 6 units of Board Developed Courses, including at least 2 units of English
  • At least 3 courses of 2 units value or greater
  • At least 4 subjects (including English)
  • At most, 6 units of courses in Science can count towards HSC eligibility

English Choices

  • English Advanced
    • Preliminary Extension English
    • HSC Extension 1
    • HSC Extension 2
  • English Standard
  • English as a Second Language (ESL)
  • Fundamentals of English
  • English Studies – Content Endorsed Course (Pilot)

Mathematics Choices

  • Mathematics
    • Preliminary Mathematics Extension 1
    • HSC Mathematics Extension 1
    • HSC Mathematics Extension 2
  • General Mathematics
  • Mathematics Applied – Board Endorsed Course

Languages

  • Different courses:
    • Beginners
    • Continuers
    • Heritage (Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean)
    • Background Speakers (Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean)
  • Eligibility criteria apply to all Beginners courses, all Heritage courses and Continuers courses in Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese and Korean
  • Heritage Languages courses first offered in 2011 (first HSC examination in 2012)

Extension Courses

  • Preliminary Extension Courses:
    • English
    • Mathematics
  • HSC Extension Courses:
    • English 1 and 2
    • Mathematics 1 and 2
    • History
    • Music
    • Some Languages
    • Some Vocational Education & Training (VET) courses

Life Skills Courses

  • Designed for a small percentage of students with special education needs
  • Student’s curriculum options determined through collaborative curriculum planning process
  • Have Board Developed status
  • Can count towards HSC
  • Cannot contribute to ATAR

VET in the HSC

Industry Curriculum Frameworks
Vocation Context HSC Context
Requirements from the Training Package Requirements from the Board of Studies
Competency-based assessment

Optional HSC Examination (for 240-hour courses)
Assessment requirements

  • VET courses let you complete a workplace credential while still at school
  • Qualifications are recognised Australia-wide (AQF – Australian Qualifications Framework)

VET Industry Curriculum Frameworks Board Developed Courses

  • Automotive
  • Business Services
  • Construction
  • Electrotechnology
  • Entertainment Industry
  • Financial Services (draft)
  • Hospitality
  • Human Services
  • Information Technology
  • Metal and Engineering
  • Primary Industries
  • Retail Services
  • Tourism and Events

Students must complete 35 hours of mandatory work placement per 120 hours of coursework.


HSC: All My Own Work

  • is a program designed to help HSC students follow the principles and practices of good scholarship
  • includes understanding and valuing of ethical practices when locating and using information as part of HSC studies

Students must complete HSC: All My Own Work or its equivalent before they can be entered for any Preliminary or HSC course.


Satisfactory Completion of a Course

  • Students must:
    • follow the course developed or endorsed by the Board
    • apply themselves with diligence and sustained effort
    • achieve some or all of the course outcomes
    • complete work placement for VET Board Developed Courses
    • make a genuine attempt at assessment tasks that total more than 50% of the available school assessment marks for HSC courses only.

Reporting – HSC

School Certificate Testamur

The Record of Achievement

Records of Achievement

How is the HSC Mark Determined?

  • Internal assessment 50%
  • External HSC exam 50%
  • HSC mark 100%

School-Based Assessment

  • Why is it important?
    • Contributes 50% of HSC mark (and ATAR if student is eligible)
    • Is a course completion requirement
    • Is used to calculate an HSC mark in the case of a successful Illness/Misadventure appeal

HSC Examinations

  • Contribute 50% of HSC mark
  • VET exams are optional
  • Some courses have practical examinations and/or submitted works or projects in addition to the written HSC examination
  • Written examinations are held in October and November each year

VET Credentials

VET Crentials

VET Assessment

  • Assessment is competency based
  • Assessment of relevant tasks counts towards AQF VET qualification component

What is the difference between the HSC and the ATAR?

HSC

  • is for all students
  • reports student achievement in terms of a standard achieved in individual courses
  • presents a profile of student achievement across a broad range of subjects

ATAR

  • is for students wishing to gain a place at a university
  • is a rank NOT a mark
  • provides information about how students perform overall in relation to other students
  • provides the discrimination required by universities for the selection process

ATAR Eligibility Requirements

  • Satisfactory completion of:
    • at least 10 units of Board Developed Courses including 2 units of English
    • at least 4 Board Developed Courses
    • satisfactory completion of at least 8 units of Category A courses
    • no more than 2 units of Category B courses

Calculating the ATAR

VET Crentials


Key Considerations for Course Selection

  • Abilities
  • Interests/Motivation
  • Career aspirations and needs

Practical Considerations

  • Syllabus requirements
  • Practical/Major work components
  • Subject combinations

Consider:

  • What do I want for my future?
  • What ‘pathway’ best suits me?
  • Ask for advice from:
    • teachers
    • parents
    • year adviser
    • careers adviser
    • students in Years 11 and 12
    • publications + website
Note: Universities, TAFE, employer groups, School, Board of Studies, UAC
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