Understanding Bell Curve Grading
Bell curve grading compares one score with the class pattern. It does not judge the score alone. It checks distance from the average. That distance is measured with standard deviation. A score far above the mean earns a positive z score. A score below the mean earns a negative z score.
Why the Method Helps
Teachers use curved grading when an assessment is unusually hard or easy. The method can reduce unfair pressure from one difficult test. It can also show how a learner performed against peers. A raw score of 72 may be strong in one class. It may be weak in another class. The class average and spread explain that difference.
What the Calculator Shows
This calculator reports the raw percentage, z score, percentile rank, estimated rank, curved score, and final grade. The percentile shows the share of the class that scored lower. The estimated rank uses class size and percentile. The curved score maps the same z score onto a target class average. This gives a cleaner adjusted mark for reporting.
Choosing Grade Bands
The default grade bands are based on z score cutoffs. A common plan gives A grades above one standard deviation. B starts at the average. C starts one standard deviation below the average. D starts two standard deviations below the average. You can change every cutoff. This supports strict, balanced, or generous policies.
Interpreting Results Carefully
Bell curves work best with enough students. Small classes can create unstable averages. Very low standard deviation also needs care. Scores may cluster too closely. In those cases, use professional judgment. Curved grades should support fairness, not replace it.
Best Practice
Set grade cutoffs before publishing results. Explain the policy to students. Keep the same method for the whole class. Save exports for records. Review outliers before final submission. A calculator can guide the process, yet final grading remains an academic decision.
Export and Review
The CSV file helps with spreadsheet checks. The PDF report helps with sharing. Keep student names simple when exporting. Compare several scenarios before deciding. Try the original average first. Then test a target average. This shows how policy choices change grades. Always keep notes beside final decisions clearly.