Changes for page Simple sentences
Last modified by Lizzie Bruce on 2020/01/11 23:51
From version 2.15
edited by Lizzie Bruce
on 2019/03/07 12:52
on 2019/03/07 12:52
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To version 2.33
edited by Lizzie Bruce
on 2019/03/08 22:02
on 2019/03/08 22:02
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
Summary
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Page properties (3 modified, 0 added, 0 removed)
Details
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 - Clearlanguage1 +Simple sentences - Parent
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 - Main.WebHome1 +Plain English.WebHome - Content
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... ... @@ -1,91 +1,33 @@ 1 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 2 -This helps: 1 +(% class="box" %) 2 +((( 3 +Following this helps: 3 3 4 -* **people in a hurry** – simply written content is easier to scan and absorb instantly 5 -* **cognitive impairments** – easy to understand words and sentences need less cognition 6 -* **visual impairments** – short and simple sentences convey meaning in a smaller visual field 7 -* **motor impairments** – it's less tiring when you can understand what you read quickly 5 +* **people in a hurry** – simply written content is easier to scan and absorb instantly 6 +* **people who are stressed** – if you're anxious you find it harder to comprehend things 7 +* **people who are multi-tasking** – if you're holding a baby or a running business your attention's divided 8 +* **cognitive impairments** – easy to understand words and sentences carry less cognitive load 9 +* **visual impairments** – short and simple sentences convey meaning in a smaller visual field 10 +* **motor impairments** – it's less tiring when you can understand what you read quickly 11 +))) 8 8 13 +== 14 +Guidelines == 9 9 16 +* [[Simple sentences>>url:https://readabilityguidelines.myxwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Plain%20English/Plain%20English%2C%20simple%20sentences/#ssl]] 10 10 11 - == Guidelines ==18 +---- 12 12 13 -[[Plain English>>Plain English||anchor="pe"]] 20 +== 21 +Simple sentences == 14 14 15 -[[Simple sentences >> ||anchor="ssl"]] 16 - 17 -Specialist terms 18 - 19 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 20 -Words to avoid 21 - 22 - 23 -== {{id name="pe"/}}Plain English == 24 - 25 -Make content clear and understandable, to open the web up for users with different literacy levels and access challenges. 26 - 27 -WCAG states that "using the clearest and simplest language appropriate is highly desirable." 28 - 29 -The United Nations recommends plain language for communications. 30 - 31 - 32 -=== 1. Choose easy and short words not formal, long ones. === 33 - 34 -Use ‘buy’ instead of ‘purchase’, ‘help’ instead of ‘assist’, and ‘about’ instead of ‘approximately’. 35 - 36 -Write for the reading comprehension of a 9 year old. This helps you reach the most users and makes your content easy to scan. 37 - 38 - 39 -=== 2. Jargon and buzzwords are unlikely to be clear language. === 40 - 41 -Often, these words are too general and vague and can lead to misinterpretation or empty, meaningless text. Avoid them. Instead, think about what the term actually means and describe that. Be open and specific. 42 - 43 - 44 -Example: 45 -"Let's touch base in 10 and do some blue sky thinking." This uses jargon. 46 -"Let's meet in 10 minutes to think of some ideas." Conveys same meaning using clear language. 47 - 48 - 49 -=== 3. Write conversationally. === 50 - 51 -Picture your audience and write as if you were talking directly to them, with the authority of someone who can help and inform. 52 - 53 - 54 -=== 4. Test your content with users === 55 - 56 -What is 'plain' for one person may not be for someone else. 57 - 58 - 59 -== Usability evidence for plain English == 60 - 61 -[[Guideline 3.1 Readable: Make text content readable and understandable.>>url:https://www.w3.org/TR/UNDERSTANDING-WCAG20/meaning-supplements.html]], Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0, 2008. 62 - 63 -[['Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities'>>url:http://templatelab.com/convention-on-the-rights-of-persons-with-disabilities/]], page 4 Article 2, Definitions, The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, 2018. 64 - 65 -[['Plain Language Is for Everyone, Even Experts'>>url:https://www.nngroup.com/articles/plain-language-experts/]], H. Loranger, Nielsen Norman Group, 2017 66 - 67 -[['The Public Speaks: An Empirical Study of Legal Communication'>>url:https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1843415]], C. R. Trudeau in 14 Scribes J. Leg. Writing 121 2012 68 - 69 -[['Strengthening plain language'>>url:http://www.iplfederation.org/]], International Plain Language Federation. Undated. 70 - 71 -[[Plain Language Commission style guide>>url:https://www.clearest.co.uk/plain-language-commission-style-guide]], Plain Language Commission, 2011 72 - 73 -[['The principles of readability'>>url:http://www.impact-information.com/impactinfo/readability02.pdf]], Impact Information, William H. DuBay, 2004 74 - 75 -[[Plain language entry>>url:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_language]], Wikipedia, last updated 2018 76 - 77 - 78 -== {{id name="ssl"/}}Simple sentences == 79 - 80 - 81 81 === 1. Make your average sentence 15 words long. === 82 82 83 -The maximum sentence length wewouldrecommend foreasycomprehension is 25 words.25 +The maximum sentence length for a good level of comprehension is 25 words. Split long sentences up into 2 or 3, or use bullet points. 84 84 85 - Youcan splitlonger sentencesupinto 2 or 3 or restructure the contentwithbullet pointsto make meaningclearer forusers.27 +Oxford Guide to plain English, GOV.UK and linguists agree 15 word sentences are fine but above 40 words is hard to understand. 86 86 87 87 88 -== 2. Avoid complex sentence structures. == 30 +=== 2. Avoid complex sentence structures. === 89 89 90 90 They are less easy to comprehend quickly. Understanding them requires more cognitive effort than simple sentences. 91 91 ... ... @@ -94,24 +94,20 @@ 94 94 95 95 * number of clauses in a sentence, the more clauses the more complex it is 96 96 * distribution of associated words across the sentence – how easily can the brain 'parse a phrase': recognise, connect and comprehend words that together convey meaning 39 + 97 97 41 +>Example:"The red fox jumped over the gate." – easier to understand 42 +>"The fox, which was red, over the gate jumped." – harder to understand 98 98 99 -Example: 100 100 101 -"The red fox jumped over the gate." – easier to understand 102 -"The fox, which was red, over the gate jumped." – harder to understand 45 +== Usability evidence: simple sentences == 103 103 47 +Oxford Guide to plain English 104 104 105 - ==Usabilityevidence for simplesentences==49 +Jyoti Sanyal 'Indlish' 106 106 107 - "People withsome learningdisabilities read letter for letter – they donot bouncearound like other users. Theyalso cannot fully understand a sentenceif it’s too long. People with moderate learning disabilities can understand sentences of 5 to 8 words without difficulty. By using common words we can help all users understand sentences of around 25 words." GOV.UK51 +Author Ann Wylie 108 108 109 -The Oxford Guide to Plain English recommends 15–20 words per sentence. It also says: "…if you regularly exceed 40 words, you’ll certainly weary and deter your readers." 110 - 111 -Jyoti Sanyal, author of 'Indlish' said: "Based on several studies, press associations in the USA have laid down a readability table. Their survey shows readers find sentences of 8 words or less very easy to read; 11 words, easy; 14 words fairly easy; 17 words standard; 21 words fairly difficult; 25 words difficult and 29 words or more, very difficult." 112 - 113 -Author Ann Wylie said: "When the average sentence length in a piece was fewer than 8 words long, readers understood 100% of the story. At 14 words, they could comprehend more than 90% of the information. But move up to 43-word sentences and comprehension dropped below 10 percent." 114 - 115 115 [[Writing for GOV.UK>>url:https://www.gov.uk/guidance/content-design/writing-for-gov-uk]], UK Government website 116 116 117 117 [['Sentence length: why 25 words is our limit'>>url:https://insidegovuk.blog.gov.uk/2014/08/04/sentence-length-why-25-words-is-our-limit/]], Inside GOV.UK, UK Government blog, 2014 ... ... @@ -153,20 +153,11 @@ 153 153 [[The Crystal Mark standard>>url:http://www.plainenglish.co.uk/services/crystal-mark/7-the-crystal-mark-standard.html]] Plain English Campaign, undated 154 154 155 155 156 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 157 -Here's some sector specific guidance: 94 +---- 158 158 159 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 160 -Legal 96 +See also: 161 161 162 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 163 -Medical 164 - 165 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 166 -Financial 167 - 168 - 169 -{{children/}} 170 - 171 - 172 - 98 +* Plain English 99 +* [[Specialist terms>>url:https://readabilityguidelines.myxwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Plain%20English/Plain%20English%2C%20simple%20sentences/#st]] 100 +* [[Law, medicine, money>>url:https://readabilityguidelines.myxwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Plain%20English/Medical/]] 101 +* [[Words to avoid>>url:https://readabilityguidelines.myxwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Plain%20English/Words%20to%20avoid/]]