The
reading sweet spot is that perfect balance between a childs
ability and a texts difficulty, that place where a child
can skim across the page without realizing shes decoding
symbols into ideas and stringing them together to create meaning.
It should be an experience of ease and comprehension.
Over the past several decades many systems have evolved with the goals of measuring the reader and the text. But, how accurate are they?
Readability Measures
Researchers have been working on readability measures since
at least the 1940s. In the United States, the measure in the
widest use is
The Lexile
Framework, which has been adopted by book publishers,
educational testing companies and state Departments of
Education.
The Lexile Framework measures a text by analyzing sentence length and word frequency. Once these factors are determined, theyre fed into the Lexile equation and, presto, chango!, we have the Lexile ranking, a number ranging from 200L for beginner texts up to 1700L for advanced ones.
How Is The Lexile Framework Different From
Other Measures?
What makes The Lexile Framework unique, and what has led to
its widespread adoption, is that it also measures the reader.
Readability formulas have been around for at least 50
years, but no one had ever put the reader and the text on the
same scale like we did," says Malbert Smith, president of
MetaMetrics, the developer of The Lexile Framework.
We actually linked with the state tests so that whenever they report out their scores they can also report out a Lexile measure on the student, says Smith. When we developed The Lexile Framework we really wanted to give something to parents that would be actionable. Parents dont know how to take action on a stanine or a NCE score or a percentage rank.
Once you know your childs Lexile measure, you can come to our Web site, where we have 110,000 books that weve measured. The Lexile database is updated with new titles every month, continues Smith.
How to Find Your Childs Lexile
Rank
Lexiles are used in some fashion in every state, although
not all students in a state are measured. In the U.S. there
are about 52 to 53 million students in the K-12 space in public
schools. About 25 million of those students get a Lexile measure
from one of the test publishers, says Smith.
To find out how your state uses The Lexile Framework, click here
California does things a little differently in that the results of its Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) program are mailed to parents with the Lexile measure reported as a California Reading List Number. A parent can use their childs Reading List Number when referring to a list of leveled books on the California Department of Education Web site.
Criticism of the Lexile Framework
The Lexile Framework has its detractors, such as
Stephen Krashen, Emeritus Professor of
Education at the University of Southern California. Krashen
asserts that the money states are spending
on The Lexile Framework would be better spent on acquiring books
for schools and districts with limited financial resources.
Teachers and librarians, he says, are already trained to match
readers with books and dont need the added nuisance of
readability formulas.
Other critics have cited the fact that readability formulas measure only a handful of factors that affect text difficulty. Factors not measured are number and organization of concepts, degree of abstraction of these concepts, length of paragraphs and the complexity of punctuation.
A simplistic way of measuring texts can lead to disconnects with reality. Say, for example, that your child has just devoured The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. Eager to cultivate her passion for reading you consult the Lexile database and find that this book clocks in with a Lexile ranking of 940L. The Fellowship of the Ring, another classic of the fantasy genre, would be a good choice, you think. Discovering that its Lexile ranking is 860L, you happily locate a copy, reasoning that giving her an easier book to read will increase her sense of mastery.
Unfortunately, it wont be long before you, and your daughter, discover that The Fellowship of the Ring is much harder to read than The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. This is an example of what happens when you ask a computer to analyze literature.
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