Australian Tertiary Admission Rank
The Australian Tertiary Admission Rank for all domestic students, or the ATAR-based Combined Rank for all International Baccalaureate students, are the primary criteria for determining the
Selection Rank for admission into undergraduate courses in Australian public universities. Domestic Students are students who are Australian or New Zealand citizens, or Australian permanent residents, or the holder of long-term refugee visa. ATAR & CR are not applicable for international students as they must apply directly to each university separately and their SR is calculated by the university. The ATAR is calculated by each state or territory's own state-level Tertiary Admission Center for all domestic students studying within their geographical limits. Interstate Domestic Students must apply to the TAC of their respective state. 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 compared to all other students in the range of 16 to 20 years old who would have completed their respective year 12 exams in that state in a year.
The ATAR rank provides an indication of the overall position of the student in relation to the student body for that year across the state. A higher ATAR gives preference to that student for the course to which they wish to enrol in a university of their choice. The ATAR is used by all Australian public universities via their respective state-level Tertiary Admissions Centers, which are the unified admission center for all the universities within that state or territory. These bodies then allocate positions for the tertiary institutions in their relevant states. Private universities, with the exception of Bond University, do not primarily consider the ATAR and students must apply directly. The list of state-level TACs are as follows:
- Australian Capital Territory & New South Wales: Universities Admissions Centre.
- Northern Territory & South Australia: South Australian Tertiary Admissions Centre.
- Queensland: Queensland Tertiary Admissions Centre.
- Tasmania: University of Tasmania, Tasmania is an exception, where the University of Tasmania is the only tertiary institution and therefore acts as a self-governing admissions centre.
- Victoria: Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre.
- Western Australia: Tertiary Institutions Service Centre.
History
Introduction of ATAR
In June 2009, the Federal Minister for Education Julia Gillard announced the removal of all state-level university entrance scores and the introduction of a national Australian Tertiary Admission Rank for Year 12 students of 2009 within the Australian Capital Territory and New South Wales, and for the rest of the country, excluding Queensland, in 2010. The ATAR was introduced to unify the university entrance system in Australia, where previously each state or territory had its own individual system. In 2020, Queensland switched to the ATAR as the primary tertiary entrance pathway, replacing the Overall Position.2016 ATAR error
In 2016, a computer error allowed 2075 students to receive their ATAR score five days earlier than they were supposed to be announced. The external SMS provider for the VCAA, Salmat Digital, created an error that allowed students to receive their results by texting VCAA and requesting their scores to be sent to them on the expected release date. This sparked outrage from parents of students who did not receive their scores, citing that they considered it "unfair", as well as concern about some students receiving their results before they were equipped to deal with them.Calculating the ATAR
In all states, the ATAR is a percentile given between 0.00 and 99.95 which compares a student's performance in senior secondary with that of their peers. For example, an ATAR of 99.00 would indicate that the recipient performed better than 99% of their peers. "Peers" is not the body of students receiving an ATAR that year, but a notional body of persons who might have qualified to receive an ATAR – as a result, the median ATAR score is generally above 50, depending on the state or territory. For example, the median ATAR score in NSW and the ACT for 2014 was 68.95. Since 2020, all jurisdictions have used a one-parameter cubic spline model to convert their aggregate scores into percentiles. In most states, when a student achieves an ATAR between 0.00 and 30.00, their notification will only indicate an ATAR of "30 or less".Though there are differences in how each state calculates the ATAR, they are all primarily based on the student's scaled subject results. Scaling is a process that is performed by all states which align student results along a common axis such that the same score in two subjects equates with the same level of achievement. In this way, students are not disadvantaged by taking difficult subjects where the average achievement is lower. All states scale their subjects differently. Theoretically, this ensures that the ATARs between students are comparable even when they took a different combination of courses. Despite this, in a 2018 survey, 35.8% of HSC students said they chose one or more subjects because they believed it would help them achieve a higher ATAR.
Victoria
The Victorian ATAR is calculated by the Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre using student results provided by the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority. VTAC will combine the student's results into an "aggregate" which is a sum of selected results from eligible subjects:- the student's best score in one of English, English Language, Literature, or English as an Additional Language,
- the student's next three best scores; along with the English score these form the "primary four" results,
- 10% of the next two best scores, known as "increments".
The group of students with the highest aggregates will be assigned the highest ATAR of 99.95. ATARs below 30.00 are reported as "less than 30" on printed ATAR statements, however the actual ATAR is available online.
New South Wales
The shift to ATAR means that the ranks of most students receiving a UAI would increase by a small amount, while the maximum rank in NSW/ACT would change from a UAI of 100 to an ATAR of 99.95.The New South Wales ATAR is calculated by the University Admission Centre using student results achieved in the Higher School Certificate. The marks included in the calculation can be accumulated over five years. Subjects are scaled such that "the scaled mean in a course is equal to the average academic achievement of the course candidature where, for individual students, the measure of academic achievement is taken as the average scaled mark in all courses completed".
Prior to 2000, language courses were not influenced by the candidature's achievement in other courses, but scaled separately against achievement in French and German. Since the unification of languages scaling into the general pool of courses, scaling has been observed to favour courses taken by candidates from higher socioeconomic backgrounds — for similar levels of proficiency, French courses have enjoyed more favourable scaling compared to Arabic. According to Dr Ken Cruickshank from the University of Sydney, "The ATAR creates a hierarchy of languages and replicates SES differences rather than differences in language proficiency".
The aggregate is a sum of scaled marks in 10 units of eligible courses:
- 2 units of English
- 6 units from Category A subjects
- 2 units from Category A or B subjects.
Australian Capital Territory
The Australian Capital Territory ATAR is calculated alongside the NSW equivalent by the University Admissions Centre. Results are calculated on the basis of students' achievement in the ACT Senior Secondary Certificate. UAC treats all ACT and NSW students as one cohort and thus the two regions' ATARs are exactly equivalent. The aggregate score is calculated as a sum of the student's three best scores from major courses and 60% of the next best course.Queensland
Queensland transitioned from the Overall Position to ATAR in 2019, with the 2020 cohort being the first to graduate through the ATAR system. When the OP was still in place, the Queensland Tertiary Admissions Centre used a scaling method known as the "Queensland Core Skills Test". Since the introduction of the ATAR, Queensland now uses inter-scaling methods used by other states. ATAR can be calculated from any of the following combinations of results:- 5 general subjects at Units 3 and 4,
- 4 general subjects and 1 applied subject, both at Units 3 and 4,
- 4 general subjects at Units 3 and 4, and 1 Vocational Education and Training qualification.