SC 3.1.5 Reading Level

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mean. Reading level is also a AAA success criterion 3.1.5. And this is one that is

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pretty hard to hit because it's very much focused on the American like school system to test.

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So the text of success criterion is when text requires reading ability more advanced

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than the lower secondary education level after removal of proper names and titles, supplemental

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content, or a version that does not require reading ability more advanced than the lower

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secondary education level is available. So I think this is already hard to read.

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So basically what they want you to use is relatively simple language, not going to

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like things that you know you need a higher education level for so so to make it available

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to people who have like lower reading abilities and i think that's actually a great idea and they

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probably should do that in the success criterion too there are only a couple like a handful of

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websites that meet this because it's AAA success criterion. And most provide a summary for the,

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for the page. So on every page, you have like a little one paragraph text that summarizes what

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the article is, or the article, the article is about. And, and then, you know, when you have

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like a lower level of reading skills you can just read the summary and then you know if it is even

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time to if it if it is a good investment to invest the time to read it or get help or you know

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rewrite it um this will be super interesting with things like ai summarization uh which you know

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because those are language models that might actually be something that they might be reasonably

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good at. So, you know, you get like a long article and then you say like, hey, give me a summary on

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this, like in, I don't know, 300 characters. And then you get like the summary of that text. And

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that's pretty, pretty neat. One website that does that is Leni Feingold's website. She's a

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human rights attorney from the United States. On every website, on every web page, she has this

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on this page box that basically summarizes in easy to understand language what's going on

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on the page. So in this case, this is an article about the law in the United States in July 2022.

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the Department of Justice said it will write new regulations next year about making certain websites accessible to disabled people.

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So you get this really simple, it's not like a lot of jargon in those texts.

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I probably myself would add the DOJ, which is Department of Justice in the US, probably would put that into brackets here in the first mention.

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But it's like, yeah, it makes sense that this is the same thing.

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But that, you know, that's just like the minimum, the minimal changes that you can do to make something more or less accessible in those cases.

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Thank you.