Suppose at a certain school, the top 4 students for a subject are listed as follows.
In the case δ << 0 student B scores substantially lower than student A. Student A always scores 90 points (moderated internal mark) until δ=0 where student A and B abruptly both score 80 points. However, as δ increases above zero by a small amount, there is an uncharacteristily large jump, with student B score increasing from 80 to 90.
This is paradoxical, seeing as one would expect any scaling processes to be continuous. I ask to satisfy curiosity at the seeming oddity.
Raw Internal Mark | External Raw Mark | |
Student A | 70 | 90 |
Student B | 70+δ | 70 |
Student C | 50 | 50 |
Student D | 45 | 45 |
In the case δ << 0 student B scores substantially lower than student A. Student A always scores 90 points (moderated internal mark) until δ=0 where student A and B abruptly both score 80 points. However, as δ increases above zero by a small amount, there is an uncharacteristily large jump, with student B score increasing from 80 to 90.
This is paradoxical, seeing as one would expect any scaling processes to be continuous. I ask to satisfy curiosity at the seeming oddity.