| example3.rat {SSrat} | R Documentation |
Example 3 of rating data with more assessors than assessed
Description
Number of assessors (rows) is larger then the number of assessed
(columns).
This data set has missing ratings. It is the result of
readratdatafixed("<example3.rat.txt>"). A 7-point rating scale has
been used. Each respondent is identified by a schoolid, a group id and a
respondent id. The rows contain the assessors, the columns contain the
assessed. When rater equals ratee (diagonal), the rating is NA.
Format
This dataframe has 7 rated persons, who are assessed by 10 raters.
- schoolid
a numeric vector, identifying the second group level
- groupid
a numeric vector, identifying the first group level.
- respid
a numeric vector, identifying the individual.
- r01
ratings received by respondent 1.
- r02
ratings received by respondent 2.
- r03
ratings received by respondent 3.
- r04
ratings received by respondent 4.
- r05
ratings received by respondent 5.
- r06
ratings received by respondent 6.
- r07
ratings received by respondent 7.
Note
Rating data can be entered directly into a SSrat compliant dataframe,
using edit. Colums needed are: "schoolid", "groupid",
"respid", and for <n> raters "r01", "r02".."r<n>". Optionally, a column
named "resplabel" can be entered, containing an additional identifier of the
raters/assessed. The raters (assessors) are in rows and assessed in columns.
For example:
mydata=data.frame(schoolid=numeric(0), groupid=numeric(0),
respid=numeric(0),
r01=numeric(0), r02=numeric(0), r03=numeric(0));
mydata=edit(mydata)
See Also
readratdatafixed example1.rat
example1a.rat example2.rat
example3.rat example4.rat
example5.rat example6.rat
example7.rat klas2.rat
Examples
data(example3.rat)