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https://doi.org/10.1007/s11159-020-09834-1

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Proficiency level descriptors for low reading proficiency: An integrative process model

[journal article]

Durda, Tabea
Artelt, Cordula
Lechner, Clemens
Rammstedt, Beatrice
Wicht, Alexandra

Abstract

Low literacy among adolescents and adults worldwide remains a serious problem, even in economically developed countries. The consequences of low reading proficiency levels can be harmful in many ways for both the individuals concerned and their communities in terms of health, political, social and e... view more

Low literacy among adolescents and adults worldwide remains a serious problem, even in economically developed countries. The consequences of low reading proficiency levels can be harmful in many ways for both the individuals concerned and their communities in terms of health, political, social and economic outcomes. While large-scale international assessments do assess reading proficiency, the data they provide for the bottom end of the scale are still somewhat undifferentiated. What is of particular concern to scholars and policymakers alike is to better understand the nature of reading difficulties among low-literate adolescents and adults. Addressing this need, the authors of this article present a new integrative process model which takes into consideration reader-related, text-related and task-related factors along different stages of the reading process that can cause reading difficulties. The process model incorporates different traditions of research on low reading proficiency: large-scale assessments, cognitive psychology, and research on developmental precursors of reading comprehension. It enabled the authors to identify core difficulty-generating factors, in particular task and text characteristics relevant in evaluating the difficulty of a reading task and thus in determining whether low-literate readers can solve it. The process model also proved suitable for incorporation into standard-setting practice. The authors demonstrate how the process model provided a framework for developing proficiency level descriptors (PLDs) which were then applied for the purpose of standard setting in a German large-scale assessment, the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). Their results show that the PLDs were indeed suitable for differentiating between a low reading proficiency level and a functional reading proficiency level among adolescents and adults.... view less

Keywords
competence; reading; level of education; cognitive ability

Classification
Psychological Testing, Psychological Counseling, Psychological Methodology

Free Keywords
process model; low reading proficiency; large-scale assessments; difficulty-generating factors; standard setting

Document language
English

Publication Year
2020

Page/Pages
p. 211-233

Journal
International Review of Education, 66 (2020) 2-3

Issue topic
Literacy and numeracy: global and comparative perspectives

ISSN
1573-0638

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.