Correction to above: the quote from p. 206 refers to high schools, not colleges.
For colleges, I found a page here that lists 25th and 75th ACT percentiles. Some pairs of schools have no overlap at all; for instance, Ohio State’s middle interval is (27, 31), while Vanderbilt is (32, 35). The average for college enrolees, per this study, was 20.1, with an SD of 4.33. So Vanderbilt’s 25th percentile is almost +3 SD.
For GPA … the 25th percentile for Vanderbilt is 3.75. The mean in this study was 2.72, with an SD of 0.65. So the 25th percentile for GPA was only around +1.6 SD.
For ACE at Vanderbilt, the 75th percentile is 0.92 SD higher than the 25th. If the same was true for GPA, the 75th percentile would have to be 4.34, which is clearly impossible, since the upper limit is 4.00.
So that supports the idea that for a given school, ACE has a narrower range than GPA.
Correction to above: the quote from p. 206 refers to high schools, not colleges.
For colleges, I found a page here that lists 25th and 75th ACT percentiles. Some pairs of schools have no overlap at all; for instance, Ohio State’s middle interval is (27, 31), while Vanderbilt is (32, 35). The average for college enrolees, per this study, was 20.1, with an SD of 4.33. So Vanderbilt’s 25th percentile is almost +3 SD.
For GPA … the 25th percentile for Vanderbilt is 3.75. The mean in this study was 2.72, with an SD of 0.65. So the 25th percentile for GPA was only around +1.6 SD.
For ACE at Vanderbilt, the 75th percentile is 0.92 SD higher than the 25th. If the same was true for GPA, the 75th percentile would have to be 4.34, which is clearly impossible, since the upper limit is 4.00.
So that supports the idea that for a given school, ACE has a narrower range than GPA.