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Award-Winning Smartphone Game 'Codex' Is Teaching North Texans To Read

As many as one-third of Dallas adults are barely literate. Each year, literacy groups only reach 1.5 percent of them. 

But now there's an award-winning smartphone app designed to change that — and it's free.

There are a quarter-million barely-literate adults in Dallas like Ivory Dunn: never finished high school and reads on a third- or fourth-grade level. The 63-year-old said she wanted to get her GED, so she asked her family for help. Ivory Dunn

Dunn's granddaughter set her up at Literacy Instruction for Texas, or LIFT.

"She said, 'I've signed you up,' and I said, 'Awesome!'”

All the students at a recent LIFT class shared two things in common with Dunn: low literacy and the dream to read. Otherwise they're different.

Damon Richardson, for example, finished high school. At 25, he’s a lot younger, and he wants a college degree. But Eastfield College said he wasn’t ready.

“They told me they would send me to LIFT to improve on my math and reading skills," Richardson said. "Because during that time, it was on the fourth-grade level."

He's taken classes at LIFT for four years now. He says people there teach him to read instead of shaming him because he can't.

They introduced him to the new literacy phone app called Codex: The Lost Words of Atlantis.

"I did try out the app. And then you know, it does teach you about spelling, words and sounds," he said.

» RELATED | North Texas Team Develops Smartphone Game 'Codex' To Help Adults Learn To Read And Write

The Codex app works so well, it just co-won the $2.5 million XPrize Literacy award. The team behind it is People for Words, made up of educators from LIFT and Southern Methodist University. The challenge — create a smartphone app that helps adults learn to read.

» DOWNLOAD | Codex: The Lost Words of Atlantis for Android

SMU’s Diane Gifford, who designed the app, says you can’t assume adults students always remember what they learned as kids.

“They needed to go back just to that letter sound correspondence in order to move forward," Gifford says. "You can’t move forward if you have missed a critical piece of information. ""

So the application teaches those basics.

“Now it’s saying the letter 'p,' so it’s very important for you to hear the sound. And it’s saying 't' as in 'tee' ..."

... which can be tedious. That’s why Codex is an adventure game that takes players around the world. Users advance by learning and using the right letters, words and sentences.

For this game to win the XPrize, users had to advance rapidly. Non-English speakers ran into a road block. They could pronounce the words but didn’t know what they meant.

"And so we went back and actually modified the game to have a hidden object," said SMU’s Corey Clark, who's on the Codex team. "Now we have visual depictions of these words.

Clark says doing that helped app users advanced a whole grade level. That progress was required for a shot at the $7 million XPrize. For Damon Richardson, he advanced two grade levels.

"It was a wonderful success," Richardson said. "I had people come to me and ask me how it works."

People For Words will put some of its $2.5million prize into improving Codex — and use some of it to celebrate.

Copyright 2020 KERA. To see more, visit KERA.

Educator Corey Clark, student Damon Richardson and educator Diane Gifford. Clark and Gifford, from SMU, are members of the award winning team People For Words that created the Codex mobile app.
Bill Zeeble / KERA News
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KERA News
Educator Corey Clark, student Damon Richardson and educator Diane Gifford. Clark and Gifford, from SMU, are members of the award winning team People For Words that created the Codex mobile app.

A screenshot from the literacy game Codex: The Lost Words of Atlantis, available in the Google Play store.
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A screenshot from the literacy game Codex: The Lost Words of Atlantis, available in the Google Play store.

Bill Zeeble has been a full-time reporter at KERA since 1992, covering everything from medicine to the Mavericks and education to environmental issues. Heâââ