[NIFL-HEALTH:3483] Re: Readability formulas and evaluation

From: Sandra Smith (sandras@u.washington.edu)
Date: Mon Dec 03 2001 - 13:58:21 EST


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From: "Sandra Smith" <sandras@u.washington.edu>
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Subject: [NIFL-HEALTH:3483] Re: Readability formulas and evaluation
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As an established author i would value these questions as a means of
differentiating materials of demonstrated quality from those of assumed
quality. SS
Sandra Smith, MPH CHES
800-444-8806
Zero to Three Fellow
National Center for Infants, Toddlers & Families
Health Education Specialist
University of Washington
Center for Health Education & Research
Clinical Instructor, Health Services
Editor: http://www.PrenatalEd.com
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Mailing Address: 2821 2nd Ave Suite 1601
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sandras@u.washington.edu



-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-health@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-health@nifl.gov]On Behalf Of
lpbml
Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2001 9:58 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [NIFL-HEALTH:3468] Re: Readability formulas and evaluation


Readability formulas have their place in evaluating a book for literacy
purposes and needs; however, that responsibility should be the burden of the
literacy professional or list creator, not the author.

With the list of questions suggested by Christina, the kind of authors that
will be attracted and willing to put up with the list are beginners, never
published, looking for an "in." The reason is that, an established author
has a distinct style that he won't subjugate to an arbitrary list or
criteria. The material that will be submitted, in most cases, will be
written to your questionnaire.  It will not be creative, which in many cases
is what is needed to grab the attention and interest of a low-skilled reader
to motivate them and add to their success and confidence.

What this approach does is remove established authors from the field you are
trying so hard to build. My husband, now finishing his seventh book, with a
contract already in hand on his next, literally, said, "I would not touch
this with a ten-foot pole," and knows of instances in which such an approach
was tried unsuccessfully.

-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-health@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-health@nifl.gov]On Behalf Of
Christina Zarcadoolas
Sent: Monday, November 19, 2001 7:40 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [NIFL-HEALTH:3467] Re: Readability formulas and evaluation


At 10:26 AM 11/19/01 -0500, you wrote:


Regarding the question about compiling a list of low lit materials where
the creator of the list is not evaluating the readability of each piece,
I'd create an inventory or audit sheet that each author must include with
each piece.  Perhaps the following could be included:

Has the materials been tested with low literate readers?  How ( in depth
reader interviews, focus groups, etc. ) What were the results?

In how many languages was the material tested?

What grade level on conventional reading scores does the material test out
at?

THEN I'd include a required description of what other language and writing
tools have been used by the authors to tailor to low lit readers.  I'd have
them describe in detail what characterizes the language of the piece or I'd
create another audit sheet with elements such as:
Does the piece have strategic repetition?
Are all difficult words explained on the page?
How have complex sentences been unpacked?
Is there adequate cohesion between and across sentences?
How does the layout reinforce it's readability?
How do graphics reinforce the print?
Is the piece culturally appropriate for low lit users in XXXlanguage?

These are just a few things a compiler can ask authors to do to bolster
their claims that the text is actually suitable for low literate audiences.

Just some thoughts.

Christina



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