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Sydney Technical High School Interview (1 Viewer)

HyphoonShah

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I have been shortlisted for an interview for sydney tech, can u all give me advice on it, my interview is on monday morning
 

Gr00by

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Just sound passionate and appeal yourself. Prepare what to say incase asked for your interests / hobbies. It could be something as simple as the books you read to something personal you have a passion for like a project etc.

Questions I've found from another thread about Sydney tech interview that you could be asked are:

- What do you do at a weekly basis?
- Why Sydney Tech?
- What can you do for STHS?
- If a teacher were to write a reference, what would he/she write about?
- Did you take the selective test in Year 6?
- Possibly something regarding your subject selection
- Make sure you ask questions about the school (Pretty much anything, even if you don't really care) because that shows you have an interest at this school, as well as some sort of curiosity.
- MAKE SURE YOU KEEP EYE CONTACT ON THE TEACHER(S) AT ALL TIMES. Shows that you are confident in front of them.

Just be yourself and answer everything they ask well, don't try and make yourself look bad and look presentable on the day. I reckon you'll be fine, dont think tech is too strict on who they take in high school years if you got short listed.
 

jjrf37

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Do you have to ask them to get it? I got in as well they didn't say anything about giving me the Hast results
 

clockiework

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It’s understandable that students from other selective schools feel the need to constantly justify their status. After all, when your school’s identity relies heavily on rankings, reputation, and external validation, reassurance becomes a necessity. Sydney Technical High School, by contrast, has never required such theatrics. Its superiority is simply assumed.

What truly separates Sydney Technical High School from other selective institutions is its lack of insecurity. There is no frantic comparison, no compulsive need to announce results, and no performative obsession with prestige. Sydney Tech students do not ask whether their school is good—they already know. This quiet confidence is often mistaken by outsiders as humility, when in reality it is the composure that comes with being objectively ahead.

Academically, Sydney Tech occupies a unique position. While many selective schools focus narrowly on theoretical excellence, Sydney Tech combines intellectual rigour with applied mastery. This results in students who not only understand complex concepts, but can also implement them effectively. In a world increasingly dominated by technology and engineering, this is not merely an advantage—it is inevitability.

Other selective schools often pride themselves on producing “high achievers.” Sydney Technical High School produces high-functioning individuals. The distinction is subtle but important. Achievement is temporary; competence is permanent. Anyone can memorise content for an exam. Far fewer can translate knowledge into practical outcomes. Sydney Tech students routinely do both, which explains why they tend to succeed quietly while others feel compelled to advertise.

Culturally, Sydney Tech avoids the exhausting elitism common in selective schooling. There is no need to constantly remind students that they are “the best.” Excellence is normalised. This creates an environment where students focus on growth rather than comparison, progress rather than posturing. Ironically, this makes Sydney Tech far more elite than schools that constantly insist upon their own elitism.

It is also worth noting that Sydney Tech’s success does not depend on aggressive competition or artificial stress. Students are challenged, certainly—but they are not crushed under the weight of expectations designed more for bragging rights than learning. This produces graduates who are not only academically capable, but mentally resilient—another quality often overlooked by schools obsessed with raw numbers.

Perhaps the most telling sign of Sydney Technical High School’s dominance is how little it needs to engage in selective-school discourse. While others argue endlessly about cut-offs, rankings, and tutoring strategies, Sydney Tech simply continues operating at a high level. It does not participate in debates about superiority because it has already moved past them.

In conclusion, Sydney Technical High School represents the final form of selective education: academically strong, practically skilled, culturally grounded, and quietly dominant. Other selective schools may win arguments. Sydney Tech wins outcomes.

And in the end, outcomes are all that matter.
 

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