What measure of central tendency is the value that has half of the scores above it and half of the scores below it?

The three measures of central tendency used to describe distributions of scores are the mean, median, and mode. Each has its own particular advantages and disadvantages depending on the shape of the score distribution. The mean is the most familiar and is the arithmetic average, calculated by adding up all the scores and dividing by the total number of scores. The median is the point on the scale that divides the distribution of scores in half (half of the scores fall above the median and half fall below). The mode is simply the score that occurs most frequently. Note that both the mean and the median are points on a scale and are found by computation; they aren’t necessarily whole numbers.

If the score distribution is bell-shaped, the mean, median, and mode are identical and fall in the middle of the scale. Because of the way they’re computed, means are influenced by extreme scores whereas medians are not. If a distribution is skewed, the mean is pulled out toward the tail of the distribution, while the median remains in the middle. Course ratings tend to be left-skewed, and for this reason IAS average ratings are reported in the form of medians.

The computation of IAS medians is based on the method described by Guildford (1965)1 and illustrated below. You may recognize this method as that used most commonly for calculating the median of grouped data. This method represents the actual ratings more precisely than does the “ordinal” median computed using un-grouped data.

Computation Example

In our example, 160 students rated a single item. The scale is 0-5 (very poor to excellent), and the mean is 3.76.

Ratingfcf
5 32 160 32 cases above
4 74 138 74 cases within the interval containing the median
3
2
1
0
40
12
1
1
54
14
2
1
54 cases below

The median is the point on the scale that divides the distribution into halves, with 80 scores above and 80 scores below. As shown in the table, the scores don’t divide themselves evenly into two groups, and the median would fall somewhere in the interval 4. The upper and lower limits of this interval are 3.5 and 4.5, respectively, and the exact value of the median is determined by the process of interpolation. In this process, the 74 scores are ‘spread evenly’ along the interval, and the median is located proportionately above the lower limit of 3.5 or below the upper limit of 4.5.

Interpolating up from the lower limit

The formula to compute the median by interpolating up from the lower limit is:

Lm + Im ( ( N / 2 – cf ) / fm )

Where:

Lm = lower limit of the interval containing the median
Im = the width of the interval containing the median
N = total number of scores
cf = cumulative frequency
f m = number of scores within the interval containing the median

This is illustrated in the following steps.

StepResult
Identify the lower limit of the interval containing the median

3.5

Find the width of the interval

4.5 – 3.5 = 1.0

Determine the number of scores needed above the lower limit

80 – 54 = 26

Determine the proportion of the interval above the lower limit

26 / 74 = .35

Convert the proportion to scale units

35 * 1.0 = .35

Find the scale value of the median

3.5 + .35 = 3.85

Interpolating down from the upper limit

Interpolating down from the upper limit will give the same median value as interpolating up from the lower limit, as shown below.

StepResult
Identify the upper limit of the interval containing the median

4.5

Find the width of the interval

4.5 – 3.5 = 1.0

Determine the number of scores needed below the upper limit

80 – 32 = 48

Determine the proportion of the interval below the upper limit

48 / 74 = .64

Convert the proportion to scale units

.64 * 1.0 = .64

Find the scale value of the median

4.5 – .64 = 3.85

Note: Although we have reported medians to two decimals in this example to illustrate the method of computation, they are reported to only a single decimal on summary reports.


1 Guilford, J.P., Fundamental Statistics in Psychology and Education, United States of America, McGraw-Hill, 1965, pp. 49-55.

Is the score in a distribution which has half of the scores above it and half of the scores below it?

The median is the midpoint of a distribution; half the scores are above the median, and half the scores are below it. The median is also known as the 50th percentile.

Which measure of central tendency is found halfway in the data set?

Median (EMA72) If there is an odd number of values in the data set, the median will be equal to one of the values in the data set. If there is an even number of values in the data set, the median will lie halfway between two values in the data set.

Which measure S of central tendency separate S the top half of the group from the bottom half?

The median is the data item in the middle of each set of ranked, or ordered, data. The median separates the upper half and the lower half of a data set.

What measure of central tendency cuts the distribution exactly in half?

the median, symbolized Mdn, is the middle score. It cuts the distribution in half, so that there are the same number of scores above the median as there are below the median.