A place to rant and rave about the joys and challenges of parenthood and life in general. And hopefully a place to find more intellectual stimulation than I generally get from my children.
Honestly, I am rather curious exactly how they figure this out. The site doesn't say anything about what algorithm they use. Who'd have thought your sister with nary a college diploma would be writing a more "erudite" blog.
Well, we do cover a wide range of topics here: religion, engineering, child rearing. I'd say it isn't your everyday conversation, but that would be underestimating the power of Rose folks.
Whatever the alogrithm's looking for, I assume that this blog's current rating can be explained by the recent medical entries, which contain unusual vocabulary.
The "reading level" varies depending on which entries you're looking at. By inputting the URL of the idividual archives, you can see how reading level changes from month to month. I noticed this with the MPAA rating algorithm, too--my archives ranged from PG to NC-17.
6 comments:
The baking blog only gets: College, undergrad
Apparently I write the Sages at the undergraduate level, while the Long Walk blog is too facile even for high schoolers.
I like to include something for the hoi polloi as well as my more "erudite" readership.
Honestly, I am rather curious exactly how they figure this out. The site doesn't say anything about what algorithm they use. Who'd have thought your sister with nary a college diploma would be writing a more "erudite" blog.
And mine's only elementary school level! Somehow, this news makes me happy. :-)
Well, we do cover a wide range of topics here: religion, engineering, child rearing. I'd say it isn't your everyday conversation, but that would be underestimating the power of Rose folks.
Whatever the alogrithm's looking for, I assume that this blog's current rating can be explained by the recent medical entries, which contain unusual vocabulary.
The "reading level" varies depending on which entries you're looking at. By inputting the URL of the idividual archives, you can see how reading level changes from month to month. I noticed this with the MPAA rating algorithm, too--my archives ranged from PG to NC-17.
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