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  2. Australian Tertiary Admission Rank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Tertiary...

    The Selection Rank is calculated by each University separately based on the ATAR or CR as well as additional points for each university's unique criteria such as a student's educational disadvantage or subject performance. ATAR is not a mark, but rather a percentile ranking between 0.00 and 99.95 which shows the student’s relative position ...

  3. Universities Admissions Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universities_Admissions_Centre

    A student's selection rank for each subject is composed of their ATAR, plus any adjustment points individual institutions may offer for reaching certain targets in specific subjects. [3] Students rank tertiary courses in order of preference, and if a student reaches the required selection rank for any of the courses in their list, the student ...

  4. List of universities in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_universities_in...

    Times rank [16] ARWU rank [17] QS rank [18] US News rank [19] CWTS rank [20] Australian Catholic University: Public Brisbane, Canberra, Melbourne, North Sydney, Blacktown, Ballarat, Strathfield, Italy: National: 1991 1991 401–500 501–600 901-950 416 1374 Australian National University: Public Canberra: ACT: 1946 1946 67 84 30 62 259 ...

  5. Tertiary education in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tertiary_education_in...

    Selection Rank (SR): a rank assigned by the university for granting admission. Domestic students must apply to the Tertiary Admission Centre (TAC) of the relevant state which will calculate the ATAR and their selection rank is determined by the university based on the ATAR and some other additional criteria assigned by the university.

  6. Universities Admission Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universities_Admission_Index

    UAI scores were not directly equivalent to a percentile rank among those who completed Year 12 (i.e. a UAI of 99 was not equivalent to placing in the top 1% of the state). The statistical distribution of UAI scores in 2004 found that 1.6% of students who completed Year 12 scored at or over a UAI of 99. [3] UAIs are awarded in increments of 0.05.

  7. Tertiary Entrance Rank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tertiary_Entrance_Rank

    the scaled scores for the best four subjects, 50% of the scaled score for the next best (fifth) subject. The university aggregates (out of 90) were ordered from lowest to highest, and the TER was assigned as a percentage rank (in steps of 0.05, ranging from 0.00 to 99.95) according to the student's position on that list.

  8. Overall Position - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overall_Position

    Instead of being a percentile rank (0.00 - 99.95), however, OPs are measured on a scale from 1 to 25, where 1 is the highest and 25 is the lowest. This range of possible results is bell curved so the percentage of students receiving the very highest and very lowest results is much less common than those receiving mid-range OPs.

  9. Tertiary Entrance Exam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tertiary_Entrance_Exam

    In 2008, the TES was a score out of 510 (during 2009, out of 400), calculated on the basis of a person's TEE exam results. [citation needed]Previously, the TES was calculated by multiplying an applicant's best mean scaled score over four or five Tertiary Entrance subjects, with at least one subject from each of List 1 and List 2 contributing to the score, by 5.1.