PIRLS 2001: Reading literacy in New Zealand: Final results Publications
Publication Details
This document is a summary of the final results from New Zealand's participation in the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study and the partial replication of the 1990-1991 IEA Reading Literacy Study (10-Year Trends Study). These studies involved Year 5 students and were administered in New Zealand in November 2001.
Author(s): Comparative Education Research Unit, Ministry of Education
Date Published: April 2003
Summary
In 2001, New Zealand and 34 other countries took part in the first Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS-01). New Zealand and eight of the other participating countries also took part in the 10-Year Trends Study, which partially replicated the 1990-1991 IEA1 Reading Literacy Study.
In New Zealand, these two studies assessed the reading literacy of two different groups of Year 5 students. This report presents, in an international context, an overview of findings from these two studies for New Zealand students.
Key Findings from PIRLS-01
- The mean score for New Zealand students (529) was higher than the international mean (500). This difference was statistically significant.
- The difference between the mean scores for girls and for boys in New Zealand was one of the largest to be observed internationally.
- The spread of scores for New Zealand students was wider than the spread for students in most other countries.
Key Findings from 10-Year Trends Study
- As measured by this study, students' overall performance in reading literacy was virtually the same in 2001 (502) as it was in 1990 (498).
- The difference between girls and boys mean scores was of the same order in 2001 as it was in 1990.
- A higher proportion of New Zealand students reported speaking a language other than English in the home in 2001 than in 1990, with this increase statistically significant.
Footnote
The International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement.
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