Contents
- Readability Tests
- Test the Readability of a Website
- Interpreting the Results
- Readability Results
- Gunning-Fog Index
- Flesch Reading Ease
- Flesch-Kincaid grade level
- Reading Level Algorithms
- Further Reading
Readability Tests
Gunning Fog, Flesch Reading Ease, and Flesch-Kincaid are reading level algorithms that can be helpful in determining how readable your content is. Reading level algorithms only provide a rough guide, as they tend to reward short sentences made up of short words. Whilst they're rough guides, they can give a useful indication as to whether you've pitched your content at the right level for your intended audience.
Test the Readability of a Website
Interpreting the Results
This service analyses the readability of all rendered content. Unfortunately, this will include navigation items, and other short items of content that do not make up the part of the page that is intended to be the subject of the readability test. These items are likely to skew the results. The difference will be minimal in situations where the copy content is much larger than the navigation items, but documents with little content but lots of navigation items will return results that aren't correct.
Philip Chalmers of Benefit from IT provided the following typical Fog Index scores, to help ascertain the readability of documents.
Fog Index | Resources |
---|---|
6 | TV guides, The Bible, Mark Twain |
8 | Reader's Digest |
8 - 10 | Most popular novels |
10 | Time, Newsweek |
11 | Wall Street Journal |
14 | The Times, The Guardian |
15 - 20 | Academic papers |
Over 20 | Only government sites can get away with this, because you can't ignore them. |
Over 30 | The government is covering something up |