VCE Further Maths tends to scale down, because it is the most accessible maths, with a large, broad cohort. VTAC scales your raw study score against the cohort, and the scaled score, not the raw one, feeds your ATAR. So a strong Further score contributes below face value. But scaling only helps if you score well, so aim to score as high as you can. The exact figures change each year, so check VTAC’s scaling report.
Key takeaways
- Further Maths tends to scale down.
- It is the most accessible maths, with a broad cohort.
- The scaled score, not the raw one, feeds your ATAR.
- Scaling figures vary yearly — check VTAC.
- The average study score is 30.
- Choose it for fit, not just scaling.
How VTAC scaling works
In the VCE, you get a study score out of 50 for each Unit 3 and 4 subject. VTAC then scales that score. Scaling adjusts each subject so scores from different subjects can be compared fairly.
The scaling is based on how strong a subject’s students are across all their subjects. It is done by VTAC, not your school. Your scaled scores then feed into your ATAR.
Does VCE Further Maths scale up or down?
VCE Further Maths tends to scale down, because it is the most accessible maths with a large, broad cohort, so it tends to scale down. Scaling reflects the strength of a subject’s cohort, not how hard the subject feels.
This is a tendency, not a fixed rule. The exact scaling changes each year with the cohort. So treat any general statement as a guide, and check VTAC’s latest scaling report for the current figures.
Why it scales this way
Scaling rewards subjects whose students are strong across their whole program. A score in such a subject represents a higher standard. Further Maths scales down because it is the most accessible maths with a large, broad cohort, so it tends to scale down.
So scaling is not a judgement on how hard a subject is to study. It reflects who takes it. A subject can feel demanding and still scale modestly, or feel manageable and scale up.
The study score explained
A study score is out of 50 for each Unit 3 and 4 sequence. By design, the average study score each year is set to 30. About two thirds of students score between roughly 23 and 37.
A study score of 40 or above is roughly the top 9 per cent, and 45 or above is exceptional. These figures are set by the scaling process, so use them as a guide and check VTAC for the current detail.
Raw vs scaled study score
Your raw study score is the one you earn in the subject. Your scaled study score is what it becomes after VTAC scaling. The scaled score can be higher or lower than the raw score.
It is the scaled study score, not the raw one, that counts toward your ATAR. So when people ask how Further Maths scales, they are asking how far your raw score moves once scaled. Check VTAC’s scaling report for the exact figures.
From study score to ATAR
Your ATAR aggregate is built from your scaled study scores. It adds your best four studies, your “primary four”, which must include an English. It then adds 10 per cent of your fifth and sixth scores, if you have them.
VTAC then converts your aggregate into an ATAR, which is a rank. So your ATAR comes from your whole set of subjects, not from Further Maths alone.
What a strong score contributes
There is no fixed ATAR that a single Further Maths score produces. Your ATAR comes from your scaled scores across all your subjects combined. So a strong Further Maths score contributes to your ATAR, but does not set it.
Because Further Maths scales down, a given raw score contributes below face value. But how much it lifts your ATAR still depends on your other subjects. See what a good Further Maths score is.
Should you pick Further Maths for scaling?
Choosing a subject mainly for scaling is usually a mistake. Scaling only helps if you score well. A subject that scales up but that you struggle in gains you little.
A subject that suits you can give a strong scaled score even if its scaling is modest. So choose Further Maths for your strengths, interests and goals, not its scaling. See whether Further Maths is worth taking.
Lifting your study score
Scaling follows your performance. To lift your scaled score in Further Maths, you need to lift your study score. That means strong SACs and a strong exam.
So focus on your rank in the subject: master the content, practise past exams, and act on examiner reports. A higher study score flows straight through scaling into a higher scaled score.
Estimate your Further Maths scaling
To see roughly how a Further Maths score scales, use our VCE Further Maths scaling calculator. It gives an indication of how a raw score scales, so you can see how the subject fits your ATAR.
Treat the result as indicative. Scaling changes each year, and your study score is what your scaled score depends on.
How Further Maths compares to other subjects
Compared with other VCE subjects, Further Maths scales down. Maths and science subjects with strong cohorts tend to scale up, while broad, popular subjects tend to scale down. Most sit somewhere in between.
So Further Maths’s scaling reflects where its cohort sits, not its difficulty. This is useful context, but it should not push you toward or away from the subject on its own. Your own score matters more than the subject’s scaling.
A common scaling myth
A common myth is that choosing Further Maths for its scaling will lift your ATAR no matter how you do. This is false. Scaling only helps if you score well. A subject you struggle in gains you little, whatever its scaling.
So the myth confuses a subject’s scaling with what you personally get from it. What you get depends on your score. A subject you can do well in serves you better than one you pick only for scaling.
Further Maths and your primary four
Your ATAR aggregate uses your best four scaled scores, your primary four, plus 10 per cent of your fifth and sixth. So a subject helps most when it is one of your best four.
If Further Maths is among your strongest subjects, its scaled score counts in full. If it is your fifth or sixth, only 10 per cent counts. So how much Further Maths helps depends partly on how it ranks among your subjects.
Why English is always counted
One of your primary four must be an English subject. Every VCE student must complete an English study, and it always counts toward your aggregate. So English sits alongside Further Maths and your other subjects in your best four.
This does not change how Further Maths scales. But it is worth knowing that English is always in the mix, so your other strong subjects, including Further Maths if it is one, fill the remaining places.
Using scaling in your planning
The sensible way to use scaling is as context, not a rule. Know roughly how Further Maths scales, but base your choice on your strengths, interests and goals. Then focus your effort on scoring as high as you can.
So let scaling inform your understanding without driving your choices. A strong score in a subject that suits you is the reliable path to a good scaled score, whatever the scaling that year.
Where your raw study score comes from
Your raw study score reflects your rank in the subject, set by your SACs and exam together. VTAC works out where you sit among all Further Maths students, then expresses that as a score out of 50.
So your raw score is really your rank, written as a number. This is why scaling can then adjust it: it compares that rank fairly against other subjects.
Scaling only helps if you score
It is worth repeating: scaling only helps if you score well. A high-scaling subject with a low score still gives a low scaled score. A modest-scaling subject with a high score can give you more.
So your score comes first, and scaling second. Chase the score in Further Maths, and let scaling do its work on top.
Common questions
Does VCE Further Maths scale up or down?
VCE Further Maths tends to scale down, because it is the most accessible maths with a large, broad cohort, so it tends to scale down. This is a tendency, not a fixed rule, and the exact scaling changes each year with the cohort. Check VTAC’s latest scaling report for the current figures.
How does the VCE Further Maths study score convert to an ATAR?
VTAC scales your raw Further Maths study score against the cohort. Your scaled scores are then added into your aggregate, your best four studies plus 10 per cent of your fifth and sixth, and VTAC converts that aggregate into your ATAR.
What is the scaled study score for Further Maths?
The scaled study score is your raw Further Maths study score after VTAC scaling, and it is the one that counts toward your ATAR. It can be higher or lower than your raw score, and it changes each year, so check VTAC’s scaling report for the exact figures.
What ATAR contribution does a strong Further Maths score give?
There is no fixed ATAR from a single subject. Your ATAR comes from your scaled scores across all subjects combined, so a strong Further Maths score contributes to your ATAR but does not set it by itself. Because Further Maths scales down, a given raw score contributes below face value.