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HSC and ATAR: What's the difference?

22 Nov 2024

Four young people with backpacks walking down a tree-lined path away from the camera

The most important thing to know is that HSC marks and the ATAR have different purposes:

  • Your HSC mark for each course tells you about your performance in your exam and assessments. There's no quota as to the number of students who can achieve top marks.
  • Your ATAR tells you about your position, or ranking, compared to other students in NSW and takes into account your achievement in all your HSC courses. Its only purpose is to help universities select applicants for their courses.

You can think of it like a running race: your HSC is your time (and is not compared to anyone else's time), and your ATAR is your place (first, second, third, and so on).

How the HSC and ATAR are calculated

HSC marks and ATARs are calculated separately using different methods.

  • The NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA) takes raw HSC marks and aligns them to performance bands to calculate HSC marks.
  • UAC scales raw HSC marks and uses the scaled marks to calculate ATARs.

The purpose of scaling is to allow a fair comparison of students, regardless of the courses they study.

Important differences between HSC marks and ATAR

Your HSC marks:

  • tell you how well you have performed in each of the different courses you have completed, but not how anyone else has performed in each course
  • are reported against academic standards (your level of knowledge of the subject)
  • are provided by the NSW Education Standards Authority.

Your ATAR:

  • tells you where you are positioned overall against other students, no matter what combination of courses you – or they – have completed
  • is a rank, not a mark
  • is provided by UAC.

Here's a tip

Lots of students get HSC marks between 70 and 80, so their rankings are really spread out. Getting closer to 80 will make a big difference to your ATAR.