That isn’t a bad heuristic either! However in practice the aggregate claims about scores are often used to make an argument relying upon internal homogeneity, and I don’t see the corresponding “scores are up among all groups so aggregate scores must be higher” often, which would require more information and space.
That isn’t a bad heuristic either! However in practice the aggregate claims about scores are often used to make an argument relying upon internal homogeneity, and I don’t see the corresponding “scores are up among all groups so aggregate scores must be higher” often, which would require more information and space.