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schools in sydney
can anyone give me any info on public versus private schools.... fees etc.
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Re: schools in sydney
Hi smvh - I've moved this to the main forum as it's not really about visas and immigration. I can't help with schools but hopefully someone will be able to :)
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Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by smvh
(Post 10891537)
can anyone give me any info on public versus private schools.... fees etc.
:confused: |
Re: schools in sydney
What specifically are you looking for?
Cost, rankings, size, location, subjects offered, single-sex, co-ed???? Look at My Schools or the government website for basic information, but remember rankings are not everything, and they have been massaged/skewed by not taking into account the IB results, only the HSC, so some schools lose out as many of their bright pupils do the IB. |
Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by smvh
(Post 10891537)
can anyone give me any info on public versus private schools.... fees etc.
You can research various schools here and then ask specific questions about the school in the area you want to live etc. http://www.myschool.edu.au Cheers Neil. |
Re: schools in sydney
Sooooo.......HSC versus IB......discuss :)
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Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by paddyo
(Post 10893911)
Sooooo.......HSC versus IB......discuss :)
Were you being serious here?:blink: |
Re: schools in sydney
:)
I'm being mischevious Caroline. You post a lot about the value of the IB and I'm assuming your children study for it, I just wondered what others thought. |
Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by paddyo
(Post 10897247)
:)
I'm being mischevious Caroline. You post a lot about the value of the IB and I'm assuming your children study for it, I just wondered what others thought. I talk about the IB because for expats, who may pong back, it is a useful way of not disrupting the education of their kids too much, or for getting their kids into Uni in a foreign country more smoothly. If you are staying, and your kids want to go to an Aussie uni, then do the HSC. It is less stress over the two years, and offered by all schools with a wider variety of subjects to choose from. However, it doesn't really teach the skills required for university level and style of working. The IB generates the all-round thinker who is able to research and produce the written work to a uni standard. A basic mark of 30/45 is equivalent to 3.5 A grade A-levels. Full marks is equivalent to 6.5 A grade A levels, when translated to UCAS scores for British universities. |
Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by carolinephillips
(Post 10898569)
However, it doesn't really teach the skills required for university level and style of working.
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Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by carolinephillips
(Post 10898569)
I talk about the IB because for expats, who may pong back, it is a useful way of not disrupting the education of their kids too much, or for getting their kids into Uni in a foreign country more smoothly.
However, it doesn't really teach the skills required for university level and style of working. |
Re: schools in sydney
Originally Posted by moneypenny20
(Post 10979856)
:confused: Massive assumption from someone who only has experience of a child doing IB. So all those public educated children who go on to Uni don't really know what they're doing when they get there? Far out!
I have friends with children who have gone through the HSC system and they mostly say that Uni is a big shock to them. The staff at school and those at prospective universities also say that doing the IB is an advantage as the students are used to the way they are required to work, and can often start courses at the 200 level rather than the 100 in subjects they have already studied. The IB suits certain types of personalities, and there is an emphasis on personal research, taking subjects from all areas of the curriculum, and using methods that uni students have to use, with proper referencing etc. It is a lot of hard work over two years, and marks count from day 1, so there is more pressure. Generally IB students are developed into well-rounded thinkers. NB Please don't think I'm now suggesting that the HSC student isn't. |
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