Duke of Marmalade
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That's the bottom line. The standardisation gave no credit for the fact that the school you went to may have been a factor in your progress from JC to LC - that schools actually matter. Of course there are those who would welcome this, in whose view it is basically unfair to be able to "buy" a better chance at LC. These same people would have welcomed the temporary suspension of the advantage for paying for private health insurance. At least this latter group got their money back!If it is a true statement that the school a student attends affects their results then the lack of modeling for a school effect will of course reduce accuracy.
The current model is based on averaging in all national past achievements between jc and lc.
There are basically two inputs:
(1) The Teachers' Assessments
(2) Predictions from Junior cycle f
You’re right that the rank decided everything. But I think the rank followed the marks.Great analysis Duke. I just have one question for you; did the marks the teachers gave their pupils have any effect at all on the results?
From my reading of it the pupil's subject ranking within the school appears to the most significant factor before standardisation. I'm not clear of the significance, if any, of the mark given.
No. Let me try and explain why ranking was needed to allocate the final calculated scores.So the teachers/schools could have given a rank without a mark and the outcome would be the same.
We risk completely downgrading our education system and demotivating good students when the system downgrades them based on statistical models than on their actual ability and knowledge
That is not correct. There is an element of standardisation of the initial marks so as to keep a reasonably level standard year on year - students are not allowed to benefit en masse from an easy maths paper, say. But this standardisation is done on a uniform basis with no attempt, intended or otherwise, at social engineering.This essentially happens every leaving cert year anyway. Results are made to fit a normal distribution, so students get moved around based on statistical methods.
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