NSW Education Minister Adrian Piccoli with students Tanvi Kher and Nilakshi Perera at Cherrybrook Technology High School. Credit:Edwina Pickles In the first set of major changes to the HSC in 17 years, a provision that allowed struggling students to be awarded a HSC but not an Australian Tertiary Admissions Rank (ATAR) for completing school without meeting basic benchmarks will be overturned. "Something needed to be done," said Mr Piccoli. Director of Commercial Services at the NSW Business Chamber Darren Cocks said businesses were desperate for a return to the fundamentals. "We are getting butchers, bakers and candlestick makers that are coming and saying that they haven't got enough numeracy and literacy," he said. "There are students who don't know the running order of the calendar. They are saying: 'September, that's in autumn'."

Students who fail to reach the minimum standard by year 9, estimated to be up to 40,000 students or 50 per cent of the cohort, will have repeated opportunities to pass until they finish their HSC or for up to five years after they finish school. "This is about motivating students in junior high school particularly," Mr Piccoli said. "We do have an issue in NSW that our results aren't as good as they should be." Year 12 student Jack Fu said the pressure in year 9 would have added to his stress. "When you are at a younger age you already have parent expectations," said the Cherrybrook Technology High School student. "Then you have to meet another standard, it might add to more stress and change the way I do assignments. "[But] I would have worked harder, so that could have turned out to be a good thing."

He said the planned changes to the way assessments are conducted, with fewer rote learned essays, a reduction in the number of take-home and in-school assessments to four per year, and more emphasis on analysis and presentations, would help curb cheating across the HSC. "I know students who will just go and purchase an essay off the internet and then just regurgitate it in an exam. That's not really testing anything," he said. Mr Piccoli said the minimum literacy and numeracy standard would work in tandem with new guidelines to make sure of the authenticity of the students' work. "We are making sure that they are not taking it away and getting mum and dad to do it, or Googling it, or getting a tutor to write it for them." From 2019 students will also have the opportunity to complete an extension science project-based course for the first time, and the difficulty of maths subjects will be scaled to reverse a trend of high-achieving students taking low-level general maths over advanced maths to improve their ATAR.

"There is no silver bullet in education. This is about modernising and making sure they keep up with parents' modern expectations," said Mr Piccoli. On Thursday, the NSW Teachers Federation said more funding was required to lift standards. "Gonski funding is essential if all students are to receive the support they need to achieve this literacy and numeracy standard," said Acting President Gary Zadkovich. Mr Piccoli reiterated that he would continue to lobby recently reappointed Federal Education Minister Simon Birmingham to commit to the final two years of Gonski funding.

The changes will impact all students who are currently in year 8 or below. Students with language backgrounds other than English or special considerations will have pathway programs developed for them to gain their HSC, while general students who fail to meet the year 9 level will be eligible for a record of school achievement. Take a sample literacy question below This question requires students to analyse a text in order to separate fact from opinion. In this text, some sentences are based on fact and some on opinion.

...(1) Richard was employed as an Office Assistant at our company for three years. (2) During that time he was only absent from work for two days. (3) Richard carried out all his duties enthusiastically and with great efficiency. (4) He was responsible for ordering stationery supplies and distributing them to staff. (5) He also participated in the office charity fundraising run each year. (6) I have no hesitation in recommending this capable and reliable team member and wish him well for his future. Loading Which sentences in the text are based on opinion rather than fact? A) Sentences 1 and 3

B) Sentences 3 and 6

C) Sentences 2 and 5

D) Sentences 4 and 6