本帖最後由 piloyniloy09@gm 於 21:29 編輯
Oxbridge professors. If your content is pitched at too high areading level, time-pressed readers may click on to something more fun andengaging. This means you lose readers and potential customers. Monitoring yourcontent's reading level is a good way to avoid this. The lower the readinglevel, the easier it is to understand. The challenge is finding the rightreading level for your audience and sticking to it. This guide will help you toidentify the appropriate reading level for your audience and edit your work tomeet it. How reading level is calculated ofmeasuring the reading level of a text, the Flesch–Kincaid
reading formula is probably the most common. It provides acalculation Pakistan Mobile Number List of the level of education a reader would need to have achieved inthe US school system to understand your content. Based on the average length oryour sentences and the number of syllables per word, it uses the followingformula: 0.39 x (words per sentence) + 11.8 x (syllables per word) - 15.59 Thiscalculation will give you a figure between 0 and 100, which is then matchedagainst a school grade. This is far from the only formula available to help youcalculate the reading level of your blog, with the Power-Sumner-Kearl formulabeing another common method that also uses the metrics of average sentencelength and number of syllables. Are you a publisher? Receive insider tipsstraight to your inbox. If this all sounds painfully complicated, a number ofcalculators will also work out

your blog’s reading level if you cut and paste a sample into anonline tool. What reading level should you be aiming for? You might besurprised to learn that the average reading level in the US is a 7th or 8thgrade level, which is equivalent to a 12- to 14-year old, according to researchfrom The Literacy Project. In the UK, the Office for National Statistics putsthe average reading age at nine years old, which reinforces the importance ofkeeping your content as simple as possible. Furthermore, your readers willspend far less time reading a blog than they would print content, and accordingto data from NewsCred, the average user
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