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N of 85 is entirely reasonable for that kind of study. You could safely generalize that to the population of Kansas English undergrads - run that through G Power and tell me otherwise.
You say in another comment that this is indicative of a failed American education experiment, and that there's a generation of illiteracy. I'm not saying that's wrong, but it's a much bigger generalization than "Kansas English undergrads" (which is such a specific category, why should I care about data that relates specifically to Kansas English undergrads?).
But my main gripe is the use of just one text. "People cannot understand this one book (therefore literacy is deficient)" is a much less convincing argument than "people cannot understand these 6 popular books from this time period" or "these 30 randomly selected fiction works" etc.
Is it well-established that Bleak House is representative of all the works we think about when we consider "literacy" and "illiteracy" as people's ability to understand texts?
I'm sorry, but there isn't a single word in that text that an English undergrad should have to look up (although I did look up the dinosaur purely to see what it looked like).
I looked up Michaelmas because I had never heard of it. And it's exactly what I initially thought it was (and exactly what it sounds like): a celebration of the archangel.