Want to get into a good university for VCE, it is very difficult to recommend reading ESL(-_- required reading) and two mathematics (mathematics with a slightly simpler mathematical method, mainly many function images, calculus and advanced mathematics in specialized subjects). 12 grade courses have hardly been studied in the mainland 10 grade, and I came to Australia after my freshman year). Chemistry (depending on whether you are interested in it or how you study), Chinese, and others. A * * * can watch 6 courses, at least 4 courses, and 6 courses are recommended.
I got 98+ in VCE, which should be a good result, mainly because of math. There are many junior high schools in Australia, and the difficulty is much worse. For example, there are three math classes upstairs. So they adopted the system of adding and subtracting points. The final score of more difficult subjects is to add some points, simply reduce some, and some do not add or reduce. The two math courses I mentioned are all scored a lot. In particular, the average score of junior college mathematics is about 10 (too high or too low, too little, in short, the full score is 50, and this is 55. If I want to have more choices of going to college, I must learn math methods. SM is not necessarily. I know some people think it's too difficult, so I don't study. Now I feel like I want to learn math well. I don't know whether you are good at arts or science. If you are a liberal arts student, it will be more troublesome, because English will be more difficult and the content will be much worse. Science is basically an English problem. Everything else is basically the same, but the structure of the course is very different.
In terms of language, it is good to remember more words, and there is nothing to learn in the mainland. If you don't have to go to a big city (Melbourne, Sydney), I recommend going to some small cities close to the big cities (such as Geelong near Melbourne where I study, the new castle near Sydney, Wollongong), where there are fewer Chinese, fewer international students and faster language learning. Many of my friends just hang out with China people in Melbourne.
Finally, I wish you a successful visa.