engagedinattempting
Padawan Learner
Many of you probably know about the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level and the Flesch Reading Ease tests, developed via contract work for the United States Navy in 1975. I was searching for information tangentially related to this when I found an online tool that utilizes both tests to instantly evaluate texts.
Wikipedia asserts that the Flesch-Kincaid tests are used widely by educators, but this gizmo is so quick and easy to use that it could have many other applications; students using it to self-test their assignments before submission seems a likely one.
The SOTT article below scored: Grade 10; Reading Ease 44. The Reading Ease works like this: higher scores equal an easier read, with comic books at 90; Time at 52; and the Harvard Law Review in the low 30s. A high grade and low readability is not necessarily what an effective communicator should attempt to achieve; a number of sources I don't consider authoritative (but think correct) inform me that the average American's reading level is grade 8, and that's probably the reason that President Obama, former president of the Harvard Law Review, gave three State of the Union Addresses scoring grade 8.*
Gizmo only is here: http://www.standards-schmandards.com/exhibits/rix/index.php
Gizmo and additional info here: http://www.whatmakesthemclick.net/2011/01/23/100-things-you-should-know-about-people-54-the-average-reading-level-in-the-usa-is-grade-8/
Additional source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flesch%E2%80%93Kincaid_readability_test
And here's a SOTT article on the dumbing down of the US Congress as measured by Flesch-Kincaid standards:
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/245732-Congress-Is-Getting-Stupider-According-to-Lexical-Analysis*
Wikipedia asserts that the Flesch-Kincaid tests are used widely by educators, but this gizmo is so quick and easy to use that it could have many other applications; students using it to self-test their assignments before submission seems a likely one.
The SOTT article below scored: Grade 10; Reading Ease 44. The Reading Ease works like this: higher scores equal an easier read, with comic books at 90; Time at 52; and the Harvard Law Review in the low 30s. A high grade and low readability is not necessarily what an effective communicator should attempt to achieve; a number of sources I don't consider authoritative (but think correct) inform me that the average American's reading level is grade 8, and that's probably the reason that President Obama, former president of the Harvard Law Review, gave three State of the Union Addresses scoring grade 8.*
Gizmo only is here: http://www.standards-schmandards.com/exhibits/rix/index.php
Gizmo and additional info here: http://www.whatmakesthemclick.net/2011/01/23/100-things-you-should-know-about-people-54-the-average-reading-level-in-the-usa-is-grade-8/
Additional source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flesch%E2%80%93Kincaid_readability_test
And here's a SOTT article on the dumbing down of the US Congress as measured by Flesch-Kincaid standards:
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/245732-Congress-Is-Getting-Stupider-According-to-Lexical-Analysis*