Posted on 03/18/2016 7:10:05 PM PDT by markomalley
From the Plain Language at Work Newsletter:
Literacy and the reading habits are of major importance in communicating with your audience. A document may be "plain" for one set of readers and not for others. Writers often wrongly assume that their audience is of the same class of readers.They are often surprised to learn that very large numbers of readers cannot read what they have written.
The first literacy surveys in the U.S. done in 1935, showed that the average reader was an adult of limited reading ability. At that time, when the average reading level was 7.8, equivalent to readers in the eighth month of the seventh year in school. The reading levels have remained consistently the same over the years, showing slight improvement each year.
The National Adult Literacy Survey in 1992 and 2003 showed the following results:
The results show the average adult reads at the 9th-grade level. This accounts for the fact that the popular blockbuster novels are written at the 7th grade level. People like to read recreationally two grades below their actual reading skill. The average newspaper is written at the 11th-grade level, the tolerable limit for a 9th-grade reader.
And this 2004 study shows:
Adults have different levels of reading skill. The National Adult Literacy Survey shows that the average adult in the U.S. reads at the 7th grade level, with nearly 50 percent below the 6th grade level and over 80 percent below the 10th grade level.
Experts recommend that documents for the general public be written at the 7th-grade level. Documents about health, medicine, or safety should be written at the 5th-grade level. Documents for special groups can be adjusted according to their reading skill and the purpose of the document.
For those of us who have to speak and write to a wide variety of audiences in a business setting, we understand that our speech and writing must be adjusted so that the majority of our audience will easily and comfortably understand us.
So when I heard about this earlier in the day, I actually gave The Donald credit: he seems to understand the above basic communication concept very, very well.
Even though I'm not a Trump fan (I'm not a fan of any of the candidates at all), I have to give credit where due!
Funny. Obola is considered such a verbose, stunning orator. Until he loses his teleprompter.
oh that’s it then, guess i HAVE to vote hillary now....
I am sick of all the attorney politicians.
It's the parse-speak of other candidates the people are baffled by.
Better tham Obama’s.
If he was a democrat they would say its an advantge, he can relate to average people and illegals much better.
Better the truth in bad English, than lies with a silver tongue.
then he can only use three words...I, uh, um.
This is it! Trump’s poll numbers will tank now, I tell ya!
“...grammar is more elementary than that of other candidates.”
Good. Maybe the average low-information, low-IQ voter can understand his message better than that of Obama, for example. So far, the delegate count says so.
Grammar police say Trump is disqualified.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YR5ApYxkU-U
HOORAY citizen Trump
“Corpse-man”?
Let not your heart be troubled. The Donald could never pass the bar.
“Nobody reads the Bible more than me.” Donald Trump.
Bump for later.
Or they could talk like John Kerry and use 1000 lofty words in perfect prose and still end up saying nothing
Well-noted, Robert. The stuttering POSOTUS is lost without the machine telling him what to say.
No Ebonics?
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