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<title>Adult Education English As a First Language: Can U.S. Adults Read? by Tom Sticht</title>
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            <td valign="top" bgcolor="#000000"><div align="left"><font color="#FFFFFF"><b><font color="#9999CC">How 
                Well Can U.S. Adults Read? Government-Centered vs. Learner-Centered 
                Estimates <br>
                Monday, February 23, 2004 <br>
                Tom Sticht </font></b> 
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>The 1992 National Assessment of Adult 
                  Literacy (NALS) tested a representative sample of adults 16 
                  years of age and older on three tests of literacy: Prose, Document, 
                  and Quantitative. Scores on each test were divided into five 
                  levels of literacy, with Level 1 being the lowest level and 
                  Levels 4 and 5 the highest levels. Results on the three types 
                  of tests were very similar so only the data for the Prose test 
                  are used here.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Using the Prose test, some 21 percent 
                  (40+ million) of U. S. adults were placed in Level 1 and 27 
                  percent (50+ million) in Level 2. These two lower levels included 
                  almost half (47-48 percent) of the adults in the U. S. and this 
                  was the basis for a Press Release of 8 September 1993 from the 
                  U. S. Department of Education with the headline LITERACY LEVELS 
                  DEFICIENT FOR 90 MILLION U. S. ADULTS.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Interestingly, the Press Release went 
                  on to say, &quot;&#8230;most of these adults describe themselves 
                  as being able to read or write English &quot;well&quot; or &quot;very 
                  well.&quot; The Press Release goes on to quote Secretary of 
                  Education Richard W. Riley making the extraordinary statement: 
                  &quot;It paints a picture of a society in which the vast majority 
                  of Americans do not know that they do not have the skills they 
                  need to earn a living in our increasingly technological society 
                  and international marketplace.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Over the decade from 1992 up to the 
                  present, numerous reports using the data for adults on the Prose, 
                  Document and Quantitative tests have appeared and the NALS methodology 
                  was also used in developing the International Adult Literacy 
                  Survey (IALS) which was eventually administered in over 20 nations. 
                  For the U. S. a subset of the NALS data for 16 to 65 year olds 
                  were used in the IALS. Like the NALS, the IALS used the three 
                  literacy tests as their primary means of literacy assessment, 
                  and they also used self-ratings of how well adults thought they 
                  read. And again, as with the NALS, the IALS research has lead 
                  to many reports about the percentages of adults in various nations 
                  with &quot;deficient&quot; literacy skills using the test data, 
                  but almost no attention has been given to the self-rating data 
                  presented in the technical reports.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>The present paper brings together 
                  data from analyses of the respondents to the Prose test in various 
                  reports from the NALS and IALS in a summary manner regarding 
                  how well adults in the U.S. think they read. These data reveal 
                  some interesting and important differences among adults in the 
                  U.S. in their beliefs about their reading skills. The data are 
                  summarized below in a number of questions and answers.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q1: How many adults 16 years of age 
                  and above in the U. S. think they read English &quot;well&quot; 
                  or &quot;very well?&quot; A1: 93 percent thought they read &quot;well&quot; 
                  or &quot;very well&#8217; while 7 percent (13.4 million) thought 
                  their reading was deficient. This differs greatly from the government&#8217;s 
                  estimate of 90 million adults with deficient reading skills 
                  based on its standardized tests.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q2: How many adults 16-65 years of 
                  age think their reading skills meet their DAILY needs for reading 
                  &quot;moderately well&quot; &quot;good,&quot; or &quot;excellently&quot;? 
                  A2: 94 percent &quot;moderately,&quot; &quot;good,&quot; or 
                  &quot;excellently;&quot; 87 percent &quot;good&quot; or &quot;excellently.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>:Q3: How many adults 16-65 years of 
                  age think their reading skills meet their main JOB needs &quot;moderately 
                  well,&quot; &quot;good,&quot; or &quot;excellently&quot;? A3: 
                  94 percent &quot;moderately,&quot; &quot;good,&quot; or &quot;excellently;&quot; 
                  87 percent &quot;good&quot; or &quot;excellently.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q4: How many adults 16-65 years of 
                  age think their reading skills &quot;are not at all limiting&quot; 
                  &quot;somewhat limiting&quot; or &quot;greatly limiting&quot; 
                  of their job opportunities? A4: 87 percent &quot;not at all 
                  limiting,&quot; 9 percent &quot;somewhat limiting,&quot; 4 percent 
                  &quot;greatly limiting.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q5: How many adults aged 16-59 who 
                  were White, Black, or Hispanic thought they read English &quot;well&quot; 
                  or &quot;very well?&quot; A5: Whites, 98 percent, Blacks, 94 
                  percent, Hispanics, 68 percent.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q6: How many adults aged 60 years 
                  or age or higher who were White, Black, or Hispanic thought 
                  they read English &quot;well&quot; or &quot;very well?&quot; 
                  A6: Whites, 95, Blacks, 83, Hispanics, 54 percent.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q7: How many prison inmates thought 
                  they read English &quot;well&quot; or &quot;very well.&quot; 
                  A7: 88 percent.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Q8: How many adults age 16 years or 
                  higher said they got &quot;a lot&quot; or &quot;some/none&quot; 
                  help with completing literacy forms of some sort? A8: 12 percent 
                  &quot;a lot,&quot; 88 percent &quot;some/none.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC"><b>Clearly, the government&#8217;s test-based 
                  estimates of adult reading/literacy skills differ considerably 
                  from the adult population&#8217;s experience-based estimates 
                  of their reading/literacy skills.</b></font><font color="#9999CC"><b><br>
                  <br>
                  <br>
                  <a href="http://www.educationnews.org/howwellcanu.htm" target="http://www.educationnews.org/howwellcanu.htm">http://www.educationnews.org/howwellcanu.htm</a></b></font></p>
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