21
Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores

Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores How do scores run or what

  • View
    219

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Lesson Fourteen

Interpreting Scores

Page 2: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Contents

Page 3: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores

How do scores run or what do they look like? 2. What’s the typical level of performance?

What does the typical individual look like? 3. How do scores spread out away from the

average value? 4. What does an individual score on a test

mean? 5. How are two sets of scores related?

Page 4: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

General Pattern of Scores What do scores look like?

– List all scores, but no sense of the scores.– List scores from lowest to highest “order”,

out of chaos, but if too many scores, it’s difficult to list.

– List scores with frequency marked reduce the length of the distribution, but still have a long table if N is big.

– Group the scores into intervals (i.e., grouped frequency distribution) ideal: 10 ~15 groups

– Convert grouped frequency distribution into a graphical representation

Page 5: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

General Pattern of Scores

Frequency distribution: a table that shows how often each score has occurred

Grouped frequency distribution: normally 10 ~ 15 groups

Graphic representation– Histogram (bar graphs) (Bailey 94)

– Frequency polygon (Bailey 95)

Page 6: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Frequency Distribution Score f

2

4

5

6

7

9

11

12

14

1

2

1

2

1

1

2

2

2

Page 7: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Grouped Frequency Distribution

Scores f46-49

42-45

38-41

34-37

:

14-17

10-13

6-9

2-5

1

1

5

2

:

5

4

4

4

Page 8: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Graphic Representation

Histogram

Bar graph

Frequency polygon

Page 9: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Central Tendency (1) 2. What’s the average level of

performance? measures of central tendency– To identify the typical score (i.e., the “middle”

of the group) Mean (x bar ) Median (m) Mode (M)

Page 10: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Central Tendency (2)

Mean– The sum of all scores divided by the total

number of the scores– Arithmetic average– The most commonly used– Mean = X

N

Page 11: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Central Tendency (3) Median

– The middle score that separates the scores into half

– There is the same number of scores above and below it (but the list of scores has to be in order, e.g., from low/high to high/low)

– The 50th percentile (p50)

– The middle score– e.g., a set of scores: 10, 5, 3 m = 5– 20, 9, 7, 6, 1 m =?– 15, 7, 6, 3 m = ?– Location of the median: (N+1)/2

• e.g., N= 15, (15+1)/2 = 8 median = 8th score

Page 12: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Central Tendency (4)

Mode:– the score that occurs most frequently– E.g., 18-21= the modal group (in the previo

us example)– Possible to have bimodal (or even trimoda

l) groups

Page 13: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Variability (1)

3. How spread out or how close together are the scores? Or how “widely” scores spread out around their center?

Measures of dispersion (or variability)– Range– Variance– Standard deviation

Page 14: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Variability (2)

Range– The difference between the highest and the

lowest scores– The highest score – the lowest score (+ 1)– Depending only on two extreme cases, so

not very dependable

Page 15: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Variability (3)

Variance (s2) A measure of dispersion around the

mean (Bailey 92)

An indicator of the spread of scores in a distribution

S2 = (x-x bar)2/N - 1

Page 16: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Variability (4)

Standard deviation (s) The square root of variance Average of the differences of all score

from the mean e.g., two sets of scores

– 3, 4, 5 mean = 4 – 1, 4, 7 mean = 4– 2nd set is more spread out larger s

s>=0

Page 17: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Variability (5)

Under normal distribution, a constant relationship exists between s and the proportion of cases: (Bailey 105)

– between mean and either +1s or –1 s 34.1% cases (between +- 1 s 68.2%)

– between mean and either +2 s or –2 s 47.7% (i.e., between +- 2 s = 95.4%)

– between mean and either +3 s or –3 s 49.9% (i.e., between +- 3 s = 99.8%)

Page 18: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Interpretation of Individual Scores 4. What does an individual score on a test

mean? What does it say about individual performance? How does this person stand relative to the group?

Percentile– The score exceeds a specific fraction of the

scores Standard deviation

– Provides a common unit of distance from the mean of the group

– Individual score can be expressed as a distance above or below the mean in the common unit

Page 19: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Measures of Relationship

5. To what extent are scores on two different tests go together? How are two sets of scores on different tests related? What’s the relationship between two measurements?

Correlation coefficient (r): an index of degree of relationship

Correlation only tells you that two things are related, but doesn’t mean causality.

Page 20: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Correlation

-1<= r <= 1– r: “+” rank people in the same order; exact agreement. “-”

rank people in the reverse order; exact disagreement– r: how strong the relationship is (the strength)

r= 1 perfect positive relationship– High on one test, must be high on the other

r= 0 no relationship– No pattern; random

r= -1 strong relationship, but in the opposite direction– High on one test, but low on the other

Page 21: Lesson Fourteen Interpreting Scores. Contents Five Questions about Test Scores 1. The general pattern of the set of scores  How do scores run or what

Correlation 3 settings that use correlation coefficients To determine how consistent a measure

ment procedure is– Info. on stability or reliability

To study the relationship between 2 measures– To evaluate one as a predictor of the other

Relationships between variables– To understand better how behavior is organi

zed