Friday, November 23, 2018

Stanine Scores

What is a Stanine Score?

A stanine (“standard nine”) score is a way to scale scores on a nine-point scale. It can be used to convert any test score to a single-digit score. Like z-scores and t-scores, stanines are a way to assign a number to a member of a group, relative to all members in that group. However, while z-scores and t-scores can be expressed with decimals like 1.2 or 3.25, stanines are always positive whole numbers from 0 to 9.
Stanines are also similar to normal distributions. You can think of these scores as a bell curve that has been sliced up into 9 pieces. These pieces are numbered 1 through 9, starting at the left hand section. However, where a standard normal distribution has a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1, stanines have a mean of 5 and a standard deviation of 2.
stanine
Image: UH.edu

What do Stanines mean?

A person with a score of 9 is in the top 4% of the scorers, while a person with a score of 1 is in the bottom 4%. These types of scores allow you to easily tell if a score is below the mean (a score of 5) or above the mean.

How to Convert a Score to a Stanine

Step 1: Rank the scores from lowest to highest.
Step 2: Assign a stanine score to your scores from Step 1:
Stanine scorePercentage of scores
1Bottom 4%
2Next bottom 7%
3Next bottom 12%
4Next Bottom 17%
5Middle 20%
6Next top 17%
7Next top 12%
8Next top 7%
9Top 4%
The mean lies in the middle of the fifth stanine, cutting the center 20% into two parts.

Loss of Information

Stanines are a very simple way of categorizing items into top, middle and bottom percentages. This simplicity means that it’s a very imprecise way to measure anything. Everyone in the same stanine receives the same score. For example, a person at the bottom of the 5th is almost 20 percentage points below the person at the top of the 5th. These differences are what is called “loss of information.”

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