Are there any magazines that DON'T tell their raters what to look for?
Jeff,
Pretty astute observation. I don't understand how the process is so "strong" when raters are being told what to look for.
Criteria simply are definitions. The more thoroughly and well explained those criteria are, the less potential for misunderstandings and misinterpretations.
You guys would pillory Golf Digest if rater interpretation of the criteria varied wildly. Explication reduces unintended variation. Golf Digest's criteria and the length to which they explicate them indicate a well-thought, time-honored approach. As befits golf's authoritative ranking system.
Mark,
I don't have a problem with Golf Digest giving the criteria to their raters. As Tommy Williamsen illustrated with his Bulle Rock example, having those definitions can bring you some objectivity when a course doesn't fit your subjective style of course.
Unfortunately, seeing the overall ratings by category, it is pretty obvious that the ratings for some criteria are being influenced by an overall impression (e.g. Augusta being the firmest, fastest in the land).
If everyone objectively rated the courses like Tommy did with Bulle Rock, I don't think Augusta would be #1 in conditioning. But, I understand that it is human nature that there will be some "creep" towards an overall grade, regardless of how defined the "independent" criteria.
Perhaps Golfweek has the right idea, where the criteria are defined and rated individually, but the "overall" rating is still left up to the rater (not the function of math). The criteria gives them things to consider, but it doesn't dictate a mathematical weighting of each factor to overall importance.
Again, none of this is meant to bash raters. It is a nearly impossible exercise to quantify architecture. I was just struck by the statistical curiosity of ANGC leading so many "independent" categories. I respect their opinions and almost wish that Golf Digest would do a huge compilation of their qualitative comments for each course. That would probably be the most meaningful system of all.