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ALL 2006

Information about ALL 2006. More general information about ALL, along with links to information about other adult literacy survey cycles, are available from the ALL Home Page.


Key Facts: ALL 2006

When: Data collection ran from May 2006 to March 2007. Results are available from December 2007.
Who: About 7,000 New Zealanders aged 16-65.
What: Skills of literacy, numeracy and problem solving measured through face-to-face interviews in each respondent's home.
Where: Seven countries have already published ALL results, and another five, including New Zealand, will publish results in 2007 and 2008.

Some FAQs about ALL are available.

Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey 2006

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey (ALL) is an international study involving some 15 countries. It builds on the International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) which was undertaken in 24 countries, including New Zealand in 1996. ALL is a joint project of several agencies including the OECD, Statistics Canada, the National Center for Education Statistics of the US Department of Education, and the Educational Testing Service which is a US-based private education research organisation.

The Ministry of Education has begun publishing a programme of ALL New Zealand findings.

ALL will produce internationally comparable statistics on adult skill levels in prose literacy, document literacy, numeracy and problem solving:

  • prose literacy – the knowledge and skills needed to understand and use information from texts such as editorials, news stories, poems and fiction
  • document literacy – the knowledge and skills required to locate and use information contained in various formats such as tables, forms, graphs and diagrams
  • numeracy – the knowledge and skills required to effectively manage the mathematical demands of diverse situations
  • problem solving – the ability to solve problems by clarifying the nature of the problem and developing and applying appropriate solution strategies.

In addition, ALL collects data on a range of socio-economic, health, and demographic variables, including use of information and communication technology (ICT) and participation in spells of adult education and training.

This information will provide new information on the relationships between skill levels and the labour market, economic growth, and education systems and services. ALL will also provide information on the impact that ICT use has on economic outcomes and the extent to which ICT use depends on high levels of literacy and numeracy. ALL results will also provide comparative information for New Zealand and other OECD countries.

The Ministry contracted the National Research Bureau (NRB), the well-known Auckland based research company, to undertake the New Zealand data collection for ALL. NRB interviewers worked on ALL from May 2006 to March 2007.

ALL has a nationally representative sample of adults aged 16-65 with over 7000 achieved interviews. Interviews lasted an average of about 90 minutes.

In ALL, interviews consist of the following elements:

  1. a background questionnaire: This seeks information on socio-demographics including work, education and training, languages spoken, literacy, numeracy and information communication technology practices and attitudes;
  2. a short ‘core’ assessment: The interviewer checks the respondent’s answers to the core and if 3 or more of the 6 questions are correct then the interviewer administers a test booklet, otherwise the interview closes; and
  3. a test booklet: The respondent answers only one of the 28 available test booklets.

Each test booklet contains a selection of the ALL tasks. Tasks appear in more than one booklet enabling linkages to be made between the booklets. This means that a score can be calculated for each of the domains as if the respondent had responded to all of the ALL tasks.

Contact Us

Paul Satherley is the ALL Project Manager for ALL 2006. If you have any questions about ALL 2006, please contact Paul Satherley at

 

 

 

Paul Satherley
Ministry of Education
Project Manager, Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey
Research Division
PO Box 1666
Wellington
New Zealand

EmailPaul Satherley

Phone: +64 4-463 2893
Fax: +64 4-463

Publications

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) Age and Literacy presents an overview of New Zealanders’ skills in relation to age and compares results from the 1996 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) with results from the 2006 ALL survey.

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) Gender, Ethnicity and Literacy presents an overview of New Zealanders’ skills in relation to gender and ethnicity and compares results from the 1996 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) with results from the 2006 ALL survey.

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) Survey: Education, Work and Literacy presents an overview of New Zealanders’ skills in relation to educational and labour force characteristics and compares results from the 1996 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) with results from the 2006 ALL survey.

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) Survey: Overview and International Comparisons examines any changes in literacy and numeracy skill between the 1996 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) and the Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) survey - results collected in New Zealand in 2006. It also compares the results from the New Zealand ALL survey with those from Australia, Canada and the USA.

The Adult Literacy and Life Skills (ALL) Survey: An Introduction is an introduction to the ALL survey and explains the nature of the survey, its application and how the results will be presented.

ALL Survey: Headline Results and Background

ALL Survey: Further Investigation

The OECD and Statistics Canada have published a detailed comparative report on ALL from the countries that have already participated in ALL.

ALL Study: An Introduction - Poster

ALL Home Page


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