Author Topic: Lexile Measurements  (Read 3336 times)

Offline Aakaakaak

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Lexile Measurements
« on: July 07, 2010, 12:43:28 AM »
So my son's school mailed out this new system for grading book levels called a "Lexile Measurement". It gives the reading level for the book and at what grade level you should be reading it. For example, Looking up Jim Butcher, he only has three books registered to date:

Storm Front - 830L
Fool Moon - 850L
Grave Peril - 730L

Now these numbers aren't directly correlary to grade level, but they do provide a wide range based on grade level. The breakdown can be found here:
http://www.lexile.com/about-lexile/grade-equivalent/grade-equivalent-chart/

From the looks of the charts, these three books can start to be read from 4th grade (early) to 6th or 7th (ideal) and a bit further would be simple reading with few challenging words for the student.

If you're a published writer you need to speak with your publisher to get your book submitted to: http://www.lexile.com. I'm not sure if there's a way a writer can have their own work graded officially. However, there's a nice tool that allows you to take a snippet of a book and have it tested here: http://www.lexile.com/analyzer/ (You need to register to use it).

I see this serving three purposes:
1. It should help you find what books are within your child's reading capacity.
2. It should help you figure out what age level will be able to read your books. This can help with that whole "speaking to your audience" thing.
3. Someone tell Jim that he needs to kick his publishers in the butt to get the rest of his work graded. The Codex Alera series isn't even there.

If you already knew about this system forget I mentioned it. If you didn't, then, well, there you go. Go forth and check it out.
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Offline Enjorous

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Re: Lexile Measurements
« Reply #1 on: July 07, 2010, 01:51:06 AM »
This seems to make more sense then the Flesch-Kinkaid scales.
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Offline LizW65

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Re: Lexile Measurements
« Reply #2 on: July 07, 2010, 08:51:19 PM »
This particular phrase:  "It is important to note that the Lexile measure of a book refers to its text difficulty only. A Lexile measure does not address the content or quality of the book" leads me to question the value of the study. 
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Offline Enjorous

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Re: Lexile Measurements
« Reply #3 on: July 07, 2010, 10:27:29 PM »
Almost all measurements like that are done on the basis of text difficulty and not content. Content, after all, is fairly subjective as to what is and what is not age appropriate.

The most common, like I said earlier is the Flesch Kincaid Grade Level; which is calculated like this:

Flesch Kincaid Grade Level= (0.39xAverage Sentence Length in Words) + (11.8xAverage Syllables per Word) − 15.59

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Offline prophet224

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Re: Lexile Measurements
« Reply #4 on: July 08, 2010, 07:08:49 PM »
Lexile is a pretty good assessment, though if I remember correctly there are some books that come up strange.  Regardless, Scholastic uses lexile as the measurement for their books and educator-focused software.
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Offline Aakaakaak

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Re: Lexile Measurements
« Reply #5 on: July 08, 2010, 08:13:21 PM »
It seems to be the new standard everywhere now. It's a metric to pay attention to...and to get yourself "graded" if you're a published writer.
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