Author Topic: CNBC Rates Grade Level of GOP Candidates' Speech Patterns; Childish Moderators Not Taken Into Account  (Read 1210 times)

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rangerrebew

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CNBC Rates Grade Level of GOP Candidates' Speech Patterns; Childish Moderators Not Taken Into Account
By Tom Blumer | October 29, 2015 | 3:50 PM EDT
 
It would appear that CNBC isn't going to take the criticism of its debate panelists' awful conduct last night lying down.

In what appears to be an all too predictable immature response to the dressing-downs several Republican presidential candidates administered to certain of their moderators as a result of their juvenile behavior and insulting questions — particularly John Harwood and Carl Quintillana — the network has rushed out ratings of the top ten GOP candidates' speech patterns during the first three debates, with an obvious undertone: Ignore these candidates; they're just a bunch of dummies.

Setting the sniping and the inherent weaknesses of grade-level determinations aside, CNBC's Eric Chemi and Nicholas Wells must not realize that their critique ends up being a savage indictment both of the decay of the country's education system during the past 100 or so years — years during which the left has exercised ever-increasing control of education at all levels — and of how the left-controlled press has used the television age not to inform but to instead incite emotional reactions.

The title of the chart below betrays condescending, blatantly obvious, in-your-face bias:

    College-level speaking not required at the GOP debates

    (By the way, college-level speaking isn't seen in Democratic Party candidates' speeches either; but CNBC won't let troublesome facts get in the way of a desperate hit job — Ed.)

    In debates rife with confrontation and verbal barbs, there was one thing that wasn't a big surprise: Nobody was speaking above a high school level.

    And at least one front-runner was in elementary school territory.

    That's according to a Big Crunch analysis of the first three Republican debates, looking at the candidates' speech patterns — and matching to them an appropriate school-grade level. We based our analysis on the well-known Flesch-Kincaid readability test. (Some readers might remember playing with this feature on Microsoft Word when writing up school reports — to see how highbrow their writing was.)

    Donald Trump is at the youngest end of the spectrum — averaging a fifth-grade level of vocabulary. And maybe that's why he's done so well in the polls: His simple, straightforward talk has resonated with the electorate. The Trump campaign did not respond to requests for comment.

    But the competition isn't all that great. On the other extreme end we have Ted Cruz. He was a high school valedictorian and has degrees from Princeton and Harvard. Cruz was talented enough to be Texas solicitor general, meaning he represented the state in oral arguments in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Even with those kinds of credentials, he's averaging only a ninth-grade level in the debates. And yet that grade is more advanced than anybody else on the stage.

    ... Here's why: Complicated speech doesn't necessarily help anybody in the polls. There is no value in being over people's heads, especially if you are trying to win their emotions. As we have described here before, voter support is driven entirely by emotions, not at all by facts.

    Political dialogue wasn't always this low. Over time, the level of speech has become simpler. Reports have shown that presidential speeches before 1900 were often graded for a college audience, a level of oratory reached only once since 1950: Richard Nixon's remarks on his re-election in 1972.

    An analysis by researchers at the University of Minnesota showed President Barack Obama's first three State of the Union addresses had an average grade level of 8.4, the lowest in the study.

Political dialogue speech patterns have descended into lower grade levels because the average voter today is nowhere near as literate as the average voter 100 years ago. How many times have we (mostly accurately) heard that today's college graduate is no smarter than high school graduates were several decades ago? "Progressives" have largely controlled the educational system for decades, and here we are. The Republican candidates are speaking to voters at their level — and that's apparently the candidates' fault.

Additionally, if "voter support is (now) driven entirely by emotions, not at all by facts" (speak for yourselves, CNBC), it's because television news has largely gone in that direction. The establishment press knows that once thought through, the progressive ideas which sound so good on paper and make people feel good about themselves for supporting them simply don't work. So the enterprise is about keeping people from doing that and convincing them to rely solely on their emotions.

The Obama comparison is bogus. Of course, a prepared State of the Union speech delivered with a teleprompter — especially necessary in the President's case, because he has demonstrated a consistent inability to speak well extemporaneously — is going to have higher-grade language than remarks made during a debate. But since we're on the subject, I should note that Mike Huckabee's and Ted Cruz's presidential candidacy launch speeches came in at grade levels of 9.9 and 9.5, respectively. Hillary Clinton's weighed in at 8.4. Bernis Sanders hit 10.3; socialists apparently don't care much about whether they're speaking over their audiences' heads.

Readers should also note for the record that, though it clearly could have done so, CNBC didn't break out the grade levels recorded in the three individual debates. It wouldn't surprise me, given that they were addressing immature, childish, mean-spirited moderators, if Wednesday night's candidate speech pattern level was lower than what was seen in the other two out of sheer necessity.

Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.
Source URL: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/tom-blumer/2015/10/29/cnbc-rates-grade-level-gop-candidates-speech-patterns-childish

Offline GAJohnnie

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Don't remember any such study of the Dims debate.

Note to Moron Media:

To be effective public speaker you speak to be understood by the widest possible audience.

Offline EdinVA

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Nobody was speaking above a high school level

Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Ben Carson were speaking at hs level?
I thing the real truth is that you do not understand anything higher...

Offline mountaineer

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Don't remember any such study of the Dims debate.

Note to Moron Media:

To be effective public speaker you speak to be understood by the widest possible audience.
I remember someone saying back in my newspaper reporting days that I should write at a seventh- or eighth-grade level because that's about all most people understand.
Support Israel's emergency medical service. afmda.org

Offline alicewonders

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The sad thing is that even speaking at a fifth grade level these days is way over the heads of the last few generations educated in the public school system.

Don't tread on me.   8888madkitty

We told you Trump would win - bigly!

Offline Relic

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Don't remember any such study of the Dims debate.

Note to Moron Media:

To be effective public speaker you speak to be understood by the widest possible audience.

This isn't for us. We realize this is stupid, and biased.

But, the low information crowd will not question this, and will use it to reinforce the idea that Republicans are stupid, (also evil and bigoted).

It's the media doing their jobs for the DNC.

rangerrebew

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CNBC Moderators Speak At Just Fifth-Grade Level

Posted By Eric Owens On 9:21 AM 10/30/2015 In | No Comments

CNBC has breathlessly reported that the Republican candidates who have participated in this year’s three GOP presidential debates have spoken at the ninth-grade level or below according to the Flesch-Kincaid readability test.

The cable network announced its findings on Thursday, the day it was widely criticized for bungling this week’s debate.

CNBC does not appear to have subjected its own moderators to the Flesch-Kincaid readability test.

However, The Daily Caller did.

The results show that the words (and words and words) uttered by CNBC’s small battalion of moderators averaged a fifth-grade vocabulary level — just barely.

Like CNBC, TheDC used the Flesch-Kincaid readability test for its analysis. (You may remember using the Flesch-Kincaid test to evaluate your term papers in older versions of Microsoft Word. The tool is still available in newer versions, apparently, but buried deep.)

The Flesch-Kincaid test analyzed the language patterns of CNBC’s moderators and established that they speak like someone at a grade of level of 5.2. That is the equivalent of someone who is about 20 percent through an American fifth grade class.

CNBC’s moderators — including fancypants Harvard journalism fellow John Harwood — can take intellectual solace in the fact that the flair for language they demonstrated in talking over the candidates and over each other was equal to the language patterns of Donald Trump.

Trump also scored a 5.2.

The rest of the GOP candidates came out between 6.9 and 9.1 on the Flesch-Kincaid readability scale. Thus, they showed language skills between two and four grade levels higher than those exhibited by CNBC’s moderators.

As the chart below shows, Sen. Ted Cruz scored highest during Wednesday’s debate on the Flesch-Kincaid readability scale. (RELATED: Cruz Unloads On CNBC For Media Bias)

The Flesch-Kincaid readability scale rates any set of written words by measuring sentence length and word length.

The story you are reading right now scores a 9.1 on the Flesch-Kincaid scale — equal to Harvard Law grad Cruz’s GOP debate performance and academic light years ahead of the speech patterns of CNBC’s moderators.

Follow Eric on Twitter. Like Eric on Facebook. Send education-related story tips to erico@dailycaller.com.

Article printed from The Daily Caller: http://dailycaller.com

URL to article: http://dailycaller.com/2015/10/30/cnbc-moderators-spoke-at-5th-grade-level/