Here is how we are ranked in Illinois.....
1) License Level
2) Score on Part 1 Exam
3) Previous tournament experience
4) Contest ratings percentile
5) Top 15 list percentile
6) Highest clinic in last 3 years
7) Most recent clinic
8) Varsity games worked
Here is how those are broken down:
Power Rating: 40 points possible, 8 categories
a. Promotional level: X - R - C, C - 5 pts., R - 3 pts., X - 1 pts.
b. Part 1 exam score: 96 - 5 pts., 92 - 4 pts., 88 - 3 pts., 84 - 2 pts, 80 - 1 pts.
c. Previous tournament experience: SF - 5 pt., Super or Semi - 4 pts., Sec/Quart 3-pts., FB second round - 2 pt., Regional - 1 pt.
d. All rating (use percentile based on average rating divided by # of ratings)
90% - 5 pts. 80% - 4 pts. 70% - 3 pts. 60% - 2 pts. 50 % - 1 pt.
e. Number of High School varsity games worked
70% - 5 pts., 60% - 4 pts., 50% - 3 pts., 40% - 2 pts., 30% - 1 pt.
(based on number of games allowed by the IHSA by-laws in regular
season for each sport by the IHSA by-laws)
f. Top 15 List from Associations, Assignors, Certified Officials and Schools
(based on percentile of average rating divide by the number of rating)
90% - 5 pts., 80% - 4 pts., 70% - 3 pts. 60% - 2 pts., 50% - 1 pt.
g. Level 2 clinic - 5 pts., Level 1 clinic - 3 pts. (within the last three years),
Level 0 clinic - 0 pts.
h. Clinic frequency: First year 5 pts; Second year 3 pts.; Third year 1 pt
For the contest rating percentile, we are ranked on:
State Final Official – Must be good enough to be assigned to the State Final
Tournament. Must be in the top 10% of all officials in the following categories: rule knowledge,
physical appearance, mechanics and signals, positioning, game management,
attitude/professionalism, consistency, judgment and reaction to pressure. (#1 Rating)
Sectional Level Official – Must be good enough to be assigned to a Sectional tournament. Must be
in the top 25% of all officials in the following categories: rule knowledge, physical appearance,
mechanics and signals, positioning, game management, attitude/professionalism, consistency,
judgment and reaction to pressure. (#2 Rating
Regional Level Official – Must be good enough to be assigned to a Regional tournament. Must be in
the top 50% of all officials in the following categories: rule knowledge, physical appearance,
mechanics and signals, positioning, game management, attitude/professionalism, consistency,
judgment and reaction to pressure. (#3 Rating)
Varsity Level Official – This official is good enough to be assigned to varsity contests but needs
more game experience to become a Regional level official. (#4 Rating)
Lower Level Contest Only – This official should be assigned to lower level contests to gain more
game experience to become a Varsity level official. (#5 Rating)
Average Rating. Each official that officiates a varsity contest should be rated by both schools.
All the ratings are added together and divided by the number of ratings for the final rating. The
IHSA administrator in charge of officials determines if a 5 rating stays as part of an official's
rating.
The percentile ranking of your rating is the most important component of the rating process. The
percentile ranking informs the official as to what percentile their rating falls according to all
the other officials in that sport. If you have a 90% ranking this means that only 10% of the
officials in that sport have a better average rating than you.
The percentile ranking is found by dividing the average rating by the number of ratings and then
ranking that decimal according to all other officials in that sport.
Each school is responsible to meet a minimum number of ratings in each sport. The IHSA can now track the number of ratings entered by each school. A letter is sent to each principal listing the deficiencies in rating if the proper number is not met by each school.
How the Ratings Percentile is Determined: All ratings in a particular sport that are received during the current school term, plus the two previous school terms, are averaged and then divided by the number of ratings. The result is that an official who works often (and is rated often) will generally receive a better ranking than an official who obtains a high average on just a handful of ratings. These numbers are sorted from top to bottom and divided into 100 groups of equal size. The officials in the highest group are assigned to the 99th percentile, the next group to the 98th, and so on down to 0.
For the top 15 lists:
How the Top 15 Percentile is Determined: All Top 15 Lists in a particular sport that have been updated during the last two years (730 days) are used. Officials receive points based on their position in the lists: 15 points for each 1st-place mention, 14 points for each 2nd-place mention, and so on down to 1 point for each 15th-place mention. The total points are sorted from top to bottom and divided into 100 groups of equal size. The officials in the highest group are assigned to the 99th percentile, the next group to the 98th, and so on down to 0.
SC should go to a system like this!