▲ | mothballed 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>I wonder where you went to school. Median means that half of the sample is above and half the sample is below. Yes I understand that, but the sample unit called out in finding the median explicitly was 'schools' not median 'state.' (And before that, test scores, in which the fundamental unit is a child and not a state). I was trying to come up with an explanation how CA could be at the bottom while still have schools around the median. If NY/CA/FL/TX are huge and tight to together, the median school or child could be in one of them even if they were amongst the worst 5 or 10 states. The 'median' as used above was in reference to schools, not states. I think the key piece you're missing here is each state does not have equal number of schools or children. Therefore if a state's schools are all scoring near the median (of schools) as alleged, and the large states are all doing bad, California could be one of the worst few states while having their schools (and children) near the median. You're getting your units mixed up. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | ThrowMeAway1618 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>California schools generally score right at or just below the median for the entire US. I'm guessing you're referring to the statement above from the comment here[0]. Is that correct? I read that as "[All] The schools in California [in aggregate] generally score right at or just below the median for [other states' schools in aggregate] for the entire US." Which is as Tyr42 (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45191847 ) interpreted it as well. Perhaps I misunderstood, but I don't believe I've ever seen comparisons of individual schools across the US. Ever. It's always comparisons of all the schools in one state as compared with those in another state. Sure, there are often comparisons within states between school districts or between schools in the same district, but never one-to-one comparisons of a single school in one state vs. all the other schools in the US. But yes, i can see how you might read it that way. That said, I guess we won't know which GP meant unless they come back and tell us. [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45190611 Edit: Clarified comparison examples within within states/between school districts/schools. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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