ATAR Notes: Forum

QCE Stuff => QCE Arts Subjects => QCE Subjects + Help => QCE Visual Art => Topic started by: RuiAce on February 20, 2019, 06:31:00 pm

Title: QCE Visual Art Questions Thread
Post by: RuiAce on February 20, 2019, 06:31:00 pm
QCE VISUAL ART Q&A THREAD

What is this thread for?
If you have general questions about the QCE Visual Art course (both Units 1&2 and 3&4) or how to improve in certain areas, this is the place to ask! 👌


Who can/will answer questions?
Everyone is welcome to contribute; even if you're unsure of yourself, providing different perspectives is incredibly valuable.

Please don't be dissuaded by the fact that you haven't finished Year 12, or didn't score as highly as others, or your advice contradicts something else you've seen on this thread, or whatever; none of this disqualifies you from helping others. And if you're worried you do have some sort of misconception, put it out there and someone else can clarify and modify your understanding! 

There'll be a whole bunch of other high-scoring students with their own wealths of wisdom to share with you, so you may even get multiple answers from different people offering their insights - very cool.


To ask a question or make a post, you will first need an ATAR Notes account. You probably already have one, but if you don't, it takes about four seconds to sign up - and completely free!
Title: Re: QCE Visual Art Questions Thread
Post by: Eyrie on September 16, 2020, 10:04:44 am
How does scaling work for Visual Art? Does it always scale down or can it scale up within a certain percentile?
Title: Re: QCE Visual Art Questions Thread
Post by: Bri MT on September 16, 2020, 11:16:32 am
How does scaling work for Visual Art? Does it always scale down or can it scale up within a certain percentile?

There's no set rule whether things scale up or down including for visual arts. People can try to guess depending on what's happened in the past but in the end it depends on how competitive people studying vis art are compared to other students (i.e. do they tend to get high scores in their other subjects. There's a guide to explain scaling here if you're interested.