Checking Readability in Word

My 5 year old’s school is running a program to help the small folks with learning to read and write. As part of this, the small folks’ parents get weekly meetings with a support teacher to discuss tasks and learning objectives, and the techniques that will help us and the kids to achieve them. It’s relatively painless, very interesting, and I can see a huge improvement in my small person’s reading skills after just 2 weeks, so all good.

At yesterday’s meeting, the issue of reading ages for different texts came up, which reminded me of a hidden tool in Word that can check the readability of your text.

The Word Options Dialog BoxTo turn on readability checking in Word 2010:

  1. Click File | Options.
    The Word Options dialog appears.
  2. Click Proofing.
  3. Under When correcting spelling and grammar in Word, select Check grammar with spelling.
  4. Select Show readability statistics.
  5. Click OK.

(If you’re using another version of Word, search for “readability” in the Online Help to get instructions on how to turn this feature on.)

Once readability stats are enabled, just run a spelling and grammar check on your documents as usual, and when that’s finished, Word pops up a dialog showing lots of lovely stats on your text.

Readability Statistics ResultsI’ve illustrated with the results of an analysis on my last blog post (Online Baby-Related Resources) .

For the Flesch Reading Ease, the  higher the score, the easier your text is to understand. At the top of the scale, 90-100 should be understood by an 11 year old. A score of 0-30 means that your readers will most likely need a university degree to understand what you’ve written. My article scored 61.7, meaning it should be easily understood by 15-17 year olds. Given the subject matter, that seems like an acceptable lower boundary.

The Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level equates the Flesch Reading Ease score to an American school grade (10.1 for my piece).

If you’re aiming for a particular reading age, you can go back and tweak your writing as appropriate to achieve an appropriate Readability score. The Counts and Averages stats will give you an idea what to focus on. To get a lower score and increase your audience scope, use simpler vocabulary, and rewrite for shorter sentence length. Keep editing and rechecking till you’ve reached the reading level of your target audience.

For more information on how the Flesch Reading Ease and Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level scores are calculated, and what the results mean, check out this Wikipedia page.

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Online Baby-Related Resources

Seems to be a baby boom going on at the mo, so for all my pregnant pals, I’m going to do a roundup of some online resources for expectant/new mommies that I found useful when expecting my two.

First off, websites:

  • Magic Mum – Subscription required. Loads of different forums on all stages of parenthood (trying to conceive, pregnant, struggling through those first few weeks, dealing with toddlers or teens…), to buy/sell/giveaway areas for baby- and non-baby-related gear, and to chat about non-baby topics such as house and home, hobbies, weight-loss… You name it, there’s a forum for it here. It’s a very active site, and I found it a really fantastic resource on my first pregnancy and first year with a baby, though I’ve drifted away from it a bit now that I’ve found my feet.
  • Rollercoaster – This site has lots of useful articles on conception, pregnancy, family life, nutrition, links to baby-related retailers, product reviews and the like. A good place to start if you just want to read some straightforward info without getting into debates. They’ve also got forums, and you can join a group for mums due the same month as you so you’re in touch with people at exactly the same stage all the way through your pregnancy.
  • Mumsnet – A UK site with more forums, blogs, info pages. Since things work slightly differently in the UK, not all of the info will be relevant to the Irish experience, but I particularly like their Product Reviews page, so wanted to give them a mention.
  • Name voyager – Stick in a name and see its popularity plotted over time. This is fun whether you’re expecting or not – try it with your own name.
  • Pampers – Info pages and Q&A for different stages of pregnancy and development in early childhood. As it’s a commercial site, they also have brand and product promotion, so you can sign up for a free pregnancy calendar, regular info packs, samples and money-off vouchers. One of my favourite freebies from these guys was a CD that arrived early in one of my pregnancies with the sounds of “inside the womb.”

If you have a favourite site I’ve not mentioned here, please give a mention in the comments!

Next time, podcasts.

Posted in Baby, Reviews | 2 Comments

Foozle

Foozle iconFor a bit of Friday Frivolity, I thought I’d share a current favourite iThing app of mine and my 5 year old’s: Foozle! Great name, great game. It’s less challenging (and frustrating) than Angry Birds, which is good for the 5 year old in particular, but it’s still quite engaging.

The basic premise is that you have a bunch of furry little shape-shifting critters, some of whom are good and some of whom are bad (and occasionally some of whom are neutral) sitting around on platforms. Some platforms are level, some are angled, some are bouncy, some swing… You want to make all the bad guys fall off the screen, while hanging on to the good guys. Tapping a Foozle changes its shape from a square to a circle, and depending on where it is, that’ll either start or stop it rolling. The fewer times you tap to get rid of the bad guys, the higher your score.

Sample Foozle Level

Foozle™ Lite is free and includes 25 levels. The full version includes 75 levels for just 79c.

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