Use Kendall's coefficient of concordance (Coef) to assess the association between appraisers when ratings are ordinal and you have 3 or more levels of ratings.
Kendall's coefficient accounts for the order of scores, but kappa statistics do not. For example, Kendall's coefficient accounts for the fact that the consequences of misclassifying a perfect item (rating = 5) as bad (rating = 1) are more serious than misclassifying the item as very good (rating = 4).
Kendall's coefficient of concordance can range from 0 to 1. The higher the value of Kendall's, the stronger the agreement.
For more information, see Kappa statistics and Kendall's coefficients.
The approximate chi-square statistic that is used to determine the p-value in a chi-square test.
The degrees of freedom (DF) are used with the chi-square value to determine the p-value. DF = N–1.
The p-value is a probability that measures the evidence against the null hypothesis. Lower p-values provide stronger evidence against the null hypothesis.
Minitab uses the chi-square value to determine the p-value.