Step I Step Question

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pathstudent

Sound Kapital
20+ Year Member
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What does the two digit score mean?

It can't be a percentile as my is 99 and I know my score is not in the top 1% (i.e 2.5 units of standard deviation above the mean).
 
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The two digit score USED to be your percentile rank, but then out of some sensitivity movement they decided to obscure it.

I have no idea what it means now. Supposedly if you pass your score is somewhere between 75 and 99.

I do know this, that for 2002 takers the average was 216 with a standard deviation of 22, so if you got a 238 you were in the top 20% and if you got a 250 you were in the top 5%, 260 puts you in the top 2%
 
Originally posted by pathstudent

I do know this, that for 2002 takers the average was 216 with a standard deviation of 22, so if you got a 238 you were in the top 20% and if you got a 250 you were in the top 5%, 260 puts you in the top 2% [/B]

A standard deviation above the mean, the last time I checked, means you are at the 85th percentile, so doesn't it mean that a 238 means you are top 15%?

plus, this doesn't take into consideration the top or bottom heavy the curve is.
 
Originally posted by pathstudent
The two digit score USED to be your percentile rank, but then out of some sensitivity movement they decided to obscure it.

I have no idea what it means now. Supposedly if you pass your score is somewhere between 75 and 99.

I do know this, that for 2002 takers the average was 216 with a standard deviation of 22, so if you got a 238 you were in the top 20% and if you got a 250 you were in the top 5%, 260 puts you in the top 2%

correction: +2SD (260), you are at ~ 97.5%ile.
 
+2SD would be a score of 260 (216 + 44), so that is the top 2.5%.

It is not surprising as about 5 people in my school cracked 260 including one freak who cracked 280 (so I have been told)