Scoring Criteria
All four elements present. Average sentence length under 20-25 words. Vocabulary appropriate to audience. Technical terms defined or replaced where readers are non-specialist. Active voice preferred where it improves clarity.
At least three of four elements present. Sentence length and vocabulary controlled; technical terms or active voice partial.
Sentences mostly readable but some long or convoluted. Some jargon unexplained. Passive voice where active would be clearer.
Frequent long sentences, dense paragraphs, or unexplained jargon. Tone reads as academic or bureaucratic.
Document is impenetrable for the stated audience. Sentences run on, jargon dominates, meaning is buried.
All four elements present. Heading hierarchy clear and consistent. Executive summary or upfront key findings present. Sections short enough to navigate. Visual aids break up dense prose.
At least three elements. Headings and summary clear; section length or visual aids partial.
Headings exist but inconsistent or generic. Executive summary buried or weak. Some sections too long. Visual aids sparse.
Heading hierarchy unclear. No upfront summary. Long unbroken prose throughout.
No navigable structure. Reader must read linearly to find anything.
All four elements present. Charts used where they communicate faster than text. Clear titles, labels, axis descriptions. Purposeful color use. Accessible to color-blind readers.
At least three elements. Visuals communicate well and are labeled; color purpose or color-blind accessibility partial.
Visuals present but some decorative or under-labeled. Color inconsistent. Color-blind accessibility not considered.
Visuals decorative, mislabeled, or harder to read than text. Color is the only signal in key charts.
No visualizations where they would help, or visualizations that mislead.
All four elements present. Tone and register match audience. Length appropriate to use case. Cultural and contextual adaptation evident. Format respects audience time and capacity.
At least three elements. Tone and length appropriate; cultural adaptation or format fit partial.
Tone broadly appropriate but uneven. Length adequate but mismatched in places. Cultural adaptation thin.
Tone mismatched. Length poorly calibrated.
No evidence of audience adaptation. Document reads as a generic write-up.
All four elements present. Digital accessibility addressed (alt text, semantic headings, contrast). Print version accessible where relevant. Translation availability noted where needed. Reading level appropriate.
At least three elements. Digital accessibility and reading level addressed; print or translation partial.
Some accessibility considered but inconsistently applied. Reading level not measured.
Accessibility largely absent. No alt text, no contrast check, no reading level discipline.
Accessibility ignored. Document excludes likely audience members.
Score Interpretation
| Total (out of 25) | Band | Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| 22-25 | Strong | Document is accessible and clearly written. Use as-is or with minor refinements. |
| 17-21 | Adequate | Address flagged dimensions before circulation. Most likely fix: shorten sentences and add visual breaks; check digital accessibility. |
| 11-16 | Needs Revision | Substantial revision required. Document is dense, jargon-heavy, or poorly structured. Use Revise prompt to identify and fix gaps. |
| 5-10 | Substantial Revision | Document fails accessibility for the stated audience. Rewrite with audience and use case as anchors. |