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Subject:
From:
Kathleen Fallon Pasakarnis <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 15 May 2002 18:14:48 EDT
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Hi Naomi,

 Is this the readability formula that you used?


Kathleen Fallon Pasakarnis, M.Ed. IBCLC

The Smog Readability Formula

Adapted from McLaughlin, G. (1969), SMOG grading: A new readability formula.
Journal of Reading, 12 (8) 639-646.

The SMOG conversion tables were developed by Harold C. McGraw, Office of
Educational Research, Baltimore Co. Public Schools, Towson, MD.

The SMOG Readability Formula is a simple method you can use to determine the
reading level of your written materials. If a person reads at or above a
grade level, they will understand 90-100% of the information. Generally, you
need to aim for a reading level of sixth grade or less. In addition, to
ensure that the text is clear and readable, read your draft aloud.

How to use the SMOG formula:
Count 10 sentences in a row near the beginning of your material.
Count 10 sentences in the middle.
Count 10 sentences near the end. (30 total sentences)
Count every word with three or more syllables in each group of sentences,
even if the same word appears more than once.
Add the total number of words counted.
Use the SMOG Conversion Table I to find the grade level.I
f your material has fewer than 30 sentences, follow the instructions for
"SMOG on Shorter Passages" and use SMOG Conversion Table II.

Word Counting Rules:
A sentence is any group of words ending with a period, exclamation point, or
question mark.
Words with hyphens count-as-one-word.
Proper nouns are counted.
Read numbers out loud to decide the number of syllables.
In long sentences with colons or semicolons followed by a list, count each
part of the list with the beginning phrase of the sentence as an individual
sentence.
Count abbreviations as the whole word they represent.

SMOG for Shorter Passages (< 30 sentences)

Use this formula and SMOG Conversion Table II for material containing less
than 30 sentences, but not less than 10 sentences.
Count the total number of sentences in the material.
Count the number of words with 3 or more syllables.
Find the total number of sentences and the corresponding conversion number in
SMOG Conversion Table II.
Multiply the total number of words with 3 or more syllables by the conversion
number.
Use this number as the word count to find the correct grade level from Table
I.

SMOG Conversion Table I(for longer materials)
SMOG Conversion Table II(use on material with < 30 sentences)
Word Count  Grade Level # of Sentences  Conversion #
0-2                   4        29                            1.03
3-6                   5        28                            1.07
7-12                 6         27                            1.1
13-20                7         26                            1.15
21-30                8         25                            1.2
31-42                9         24                            1.25
43-56                10        23                            1.3
57-72                11        22                            1.36
73-90                12        21                            1.43
91-110               13        20                            1.5
111-132        14          19                            1.58
133-156        15          18                            1.67
157-182        16          17                            1.76
183-210        17          16                            1.87
211-240        18          15                            2.0
                                 14                          2.14
                                 13                          2.3
                                 12                          2.5
                                 11                          2.7
                                 10                          3.0

Another Readability Option

The Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level Index

While the SMOG Readability Formula is an easy way to determine readability,
another option is the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level Index.
This test is automatically calculated on your Microsoft Word documents. After
Microsoft Word completes a grammar check (under tools in the tool bar),
readability statistics are displayed.

One of the formulas that is similar to the SMOG formula is the Flesch-Kincaid
formula. This index computes readability based on the average number of
syllables per word and the average number of words per sentence. The score in
this case indicates a grade-school level. For example, a score of 8.0 means
that an eighth grader would understand the document. Standard writing
approximately equates to the seventh- to eighth-grade level. However, for
Patient Education for U documents, the recommended reading level is around
the sixth grade.


An Author's Guide - Readability Testing
http://www.med.utah.edu/pated/authors/readability.html

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