A personal credit score is numerical representation of your credit worthiness. It is based on the data contained in your credit profile that is populated by the lenders you have borrowed from currently or in the past. Your on-time payment record, number of loans you have outstanding, the percentage of available credit you are currently using, and other factors all go into calculating your credit score. The higher the number the less risky your are considered by potential lenders.
Adding all the scores and dividing by the number of scores yields the mean or average.
If the distribution is Gaussian (or Normal) use z-scores. If it is Student's t, then use t-scores.
"Scores" is present tense.
netball scores are people who keep track of how many goals each team scores ;)
Cribbage
You can't do this without knowing the distribution of scores.
i do not know the scores please
They should be.
These scores are not published comparatively. You can obtain the desired scores on the VCE from the particular institution you are interested in directly.
If the standard deviation of 10 scores is zero, then all scores are the same.
Test Scores for 2006-2007 SAT verbal scores over 500 70%, SAT math scores over 500 66%, ACT scores over 18 94%, SAT verbal scores over 600 25%, SAT math scores over 600 21%, ACT scores over 24 33%, SAT verbal scores over 700 4%, SAT math scores over 700 3%, ACT scores over 30 2%
The mean of a distribution of scores is the average.