Title: Explaining Reading Achievement in PIRLS by age and SES
1Explaining Reading Achievement in PIRLS by age
and SES
- Jan Van Damme
- Lobke Vanhee
- Heidi Pustjens
- Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium)
22nd International Congress for School
Effectiveness and School Improvement Vancouver,
Canada, January 4-7, 2009
2PIRLS 2006
- Progress in International Reading Literacy Study
- Large-scale international assessment
- - 40 countries
- - 4th graders, 10-year-olds
- - Primary schools
31 Problem
- 1) Quality Average achievement
- Between countries differences in age
- 2) Equity
- There is no general SES-index
42 Research Questions
- 1) What is the impact of age differences on the
achievement of different countries and/or on the
change in achievement between different
measurement occasions? -
- 2) Is it possible to create an acceptable
SES-index across countries?
53 Hypotheses
- 1) Age effect
- a) We expect that the increase or decrease in
average age is an important explanation
of the progress or decline of a country
in reading achievement. - b) We expect that a correction for age yields a
different ranking of countries according to
their average achievement. - 2) SES
64 Method
- Age effect
- a) The change between PIRLS 2001 and
- 2006 at country level correlations
between change in achievement and change in
age - b) Ranking
- Rindermann, 2007
- gain of students in one year 42 points
- Cliffordson Gustafsson, 2007
- 1/3 or 14 points age effect
- 2/3 or 28 points grade effect
74 Method
- 2) SES-index
- - indicators
- books at home, childrens books at home,
educational aids, home belongings, financially
well- off, occupational status, highest
educational level, employment situation - - linear regression analysis proportion
explained variance of a single SES-variable
within each country - - PCA across countries books at home,
educational aids, occupational status, highest
educational level
85 Results
- 1) Age effect
- a) Average age and average achievement in PIRLS
2001 and 2006 correlations at the country
level
95 Results
105 Results
- 1) Age effect
- b) Ranking uncorrected
-
115 Results
- 1) Age effect
- b) Ranking corrected
125 Results
135 Results
Total variance explained by each component of the
principal component analysis
145 Results
Component Matrix
155 Results
- 2) SES-index country average
165 Results
- 2) Regression of PVs on SES R²
175 Results
- 2) Regression of PVs on SES
185 Results
195 Results
206. Conclusion and discussion
- We demonstrated the importance of age and
schooling on the ranking of countries concerning
their achievement level. - But the correction made is only justified if we
can assume that aging by one year has more or
less similar effects in every country. - Can we confirm this proposition?
216. Conclusion and discussion
226. Conclusion and discussion
236. Conclusion and discussion
246. Conclusion and discussion
Grade and age effects for Sweden, Iceland and
Norway