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Knowledge and Skills:

Adult literacy skills in English

Definition

The proportion of the population aged 16–65 years with literacy skills in English (defined as prose, document and quantitative skills at Level 3 or above), as measured in the 1996 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS).
Level 3 is a "suitable minimum for coping with the demands of everyday life and work in a complex, advanced society. It denotes roughly the skill level required for successful secondary school completion and college entry".44 Prose literacy is the ability to understand and use information from texts, including editorials, news stories, brochures and instruction materials. Document literacy is the ability to locate and use information contained in formats, including maps, tables and job application forms. Quantitative literacy is the ability to apply arithmetic operations to numbers embedded in printed materials, such as balancing a cheque book or completing an order form.

Relevance

The increasing complexity of our society and the need for a more flexible and highly educated workforce mean individuals need to be able to understand and apply information of varying difficulty from a range of sources to function effectively at work and in everyday life. The IALS was designed to measure adult literacy skills in English by assessing proficiency levels, using test materials derived from specific contexts within countries.

Current level

Results from the first international literacy survey in 1996 show that 54 percent of New Zealand's population aged 16–65 years had prose literacy skills at Level 3 or above, 50 percent had document skills at Level 3 or above and 51 percent had quantitative skills at Level 3 or above.

Figure K5.1 Proportion of adults aged 16–65 years with higher literacy skills (Level 3 or above), by age, 1996

Graph showing Proportion of adults aged 16–65 years with higher literacy skills (Level 3 or above), by age, 1996

Source: Ministry of Education (2001b)

Age differences

Across all three domains, the proportion of people with literacy skills at Level 3 or above was broadly similar for people aged 16–49 years but then declined with age for people aged over 50 years. Poorer literacy levels among those aged over 50 years may be due either to differences in the education received by older people or to a decline in these skills as people age.

Sex differences

Women performed better than men in prose literacy (58 percent at Level 3 or above compared with 50 percent for men). The reverse was true in respect of quantitative skills: 55 percent of men had quantitative literacy skills at Level 3 or above, compared with 47 percent of women. Differences between men and women in respect of document literacy skills at those levels were negligible.

Ethnic differences

Across all three domains, over half of all Europeans had literacy skills at Level 3 or above. Pacific peoples consistently had the smallest proportions at this level (less than a third in each domain). Māori had a larger proportion than other non-European ethnic groups in prose literacy at Level 3 or above but a smaller proportion in the document and quantitative literacy domains. Among Māori and Pacific adults, there were considerable sex differences favouring males in the document and quantitative domains that were not evident among European adults. For example, only 18 percent of Pacific females were at Level 3 or above for quantitative literacy compared with 42 percent of Pacific males. The sex disparity was not as great among Māori but was still substantial, with 26 percent of females at Level 3 or above for quantitative literacy compared with 36 percent of males.45

Table K5.1 Proportion (%) of adults aged 16–65 years with higher level literacy skills (Level 3 or above), 1996

  Prose literacy Document literacy Quantitative literacy
European 61 56 57
Māori 36 30 30
Pacific 27 25 28
Other 32 34 37
Total 54 50 51

Sources: Ministry of Education (2001b); OECD (2000)

International comparison

New Zealand's prose literacy rate of 54.2 percent was close to the OECD median of 53.5 percent, and placed New Zealand seventh out of 17 OECD countries.46 The top prose literacy performer in the OECD was Sweden with 72.1 percent. Outcomes for other countries included Canada (57.8 percent), Australia (55.8 percent), the United States (53.5 percent) and the United Kingdom (47.9 percent). New Zealand had a document literacy score of 49.5 percent, slightly lower than the OECD median of 52.9 percent. This placed New Zealand 13th in the OECD for document literacy. Scores for other countries included Canada (57.2 percent), Australia (55.1 percent), the United States (50.4 percent) and the United Kingdom (49.6 percent). For quantitative literacy, New Zealand scored 50.6 percent. This was significantly lower than the OECD median of 57 percent and ranked New Zealand at 12th place. Other countries’ outcomes included Canada (57 percent), Australia (56.8 percent), the United States (53.8 percent) and the United Kingdom (49 percent).47