My Rating:
My Rating:
My Rating:
My Rating:
My Rating:
to use this:
Code: Select all
[rating]number[/rating]Code: Select all
[rating]number[/rating]AFAIK, it is common knowledge that in a standard 1-5 ranking system that 1 is referred to as bad and 5 as good. We can thank amazon.com for that one...RobertJasiek wrote:IMO, a 1 to 5 "star" ranking system has these disadvantages:
1) 1 as the minimum can be confused with expressing something positive.
The 1 to 5 system is just 5 digits. I would think common knowledge and practice indicates replacing those digits with 5 symbols does not in effect really change the meaning of the vote. 1 is poor, 2 is inadequate, 3 is satisfactory/neutral/null, 4 is good/adequate, and 5 is excellent. Changing the symbols representing this shouldn't have an effect.2) There is no balance between positive and negative numbers.
3) The mean 3 is a positive number while it would better be 0 as a neutral number.
The following ranking system would suit better:
-- | - | o | + | ++
(I use this system in my book reviews.)
Alternatively as numbers:
-2 | -1 | 0 | 1 | 2
That Google, Ebay, Amazon etc. use a doubtful system does not mean it must be copied. It is also common knowledge that issuing numbers smaller than 5 is almost considered an insult. Such a system is meant to provoke its users to give higher rankings than they should if judging objectively.Jordus wrote: AFAIK, it is common knowledge that in a standard 1-5 ranking system that 1 is referred to as bad and 5 as good. We can thank amazon.com for that one...
It should not but it does. E.g., German media like to ask people for ranking of politicians or parties on a +5 to -5 scale. There one does not see excessive top rankings, except that the same media then forget about neutrality and prefer to publish only the top 5 or 10 ranking politicians' values.Changing the symbols representing this shouldn't have an effect.
That German politicians use a doubtful system does not mean it must be copied. It is also common knowledge that issuing numbers smaller than 0 is considered an insult. Such a system is meant to provoke its users into giving better scores than they should if judging objectively.RobertJasiek wrote:It should not but it does. E.g., German media like to ask people for ranking of politicians or parties on a +5 to -5 scale. There one does not see excessive top rankings, except that the same media then forget about neutrality and prefer to publish only the top 5 or 10 ranking politicians' values.
To be fair to Robert, while he thinks his system is better, I am inclined to think that this type of thing is cultural. If you're familiar with a given system, you're more likely to think that it fits the way you want to rate things. I agree with topazg that negatives are weighted with more than just ratings, but saying that a five-digit scale is a "doubtful system" is just Robert thinking that only his ideas are correct. Five-star systems have been used in the US for ages, well before Amazon started using them. While they certainly are a reflection of a US-based cultural construct, they seem to have been adopted in many other countries.topazg wrote:That German politicians use a doubtful system does not mean it must be copied. It is also common knowledge that issuing numbers smaller than 0 is considered an insult. Such a system is meant to provoke its users into giving better scores than they should if judging objectively.RobertJasiek wrote:It should not but it does. E.g., German media like to ask people for ranking of politicians or parties on a +5 to -5 scale. There one does not see excessive top rankings, except that the same media then forget about neutrality and prefer to publish only the top 5 or 10 ranking politicians' values.
Perhaps there should be a 0 rating as well...Harleqin wrote:The question is: what should the number represent? How should a "no vote" be interpreted?
Why is there no "0 stars"? Why am I forced to give a star to something I find completely worthless?
If the number is just a label for a bucket, then it should not be represented by a number of stars, but by a single symbol.
You misunderstood. It is not the politicians that use - but the media and opinion collecting statistical research institutes use such a system.topazg wrote:That German politicians use
I see. They are not that common here. E.g., simple school marking systems count from 6 to 1 (best).kirkmc wrote:Five-star systems have been used in the US for ages
Are you sure this is an important correction?RobertJasiek wrote:You misunderstood. It is not the politicians that use - but the media and opinion collecting statistical research institutes use such a system.topazg wrote:That German politicians use
From the horse's mouth...RobertJasiek wrote:b) false information should never stand.