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advantage of a full computer-based assessment. The digitalPIRLS assessments will include the
ePIRLS assessment of online reading initiated in 2016. With digitalPIRLS, countries will
experience greater operational efficiency in translation and translation verification, data
entry, and scoring, without the need for printing or shipping. Digital PIRLS will be offered as a
web-based system via school-based or IEA web servers, or a USB drive connected locally to a
PC with the Windows Operating System. As an alternative to digitalPIRLS, countries may
administer PIRLS 2021 in paper format. ePIRLS is available in 2021 only in conjunction with
digitalPIRLS. For more information on digitalPIRLS, please visit the IEA website at
https://www.iea.nl/. [3]
Source versions of all instruments (assessment booklets, the ePIRLS assessment,
questionnaires, and manuals) were prepared in English and translated into the primary
language or languages of instruction in each education system. In addition, it was sometimes
necessary to adapt the instrument for cultural purposes, even in countries that use English as
the primary language of instruction. All adaptations were reviewed and approved by the
International Study Center to ensure they did not change the substance or intent of the
question or answer choices. The first aspect of the assessment component that is targeted by
PIRLS is purposes of reading. The purposes of reading component encompass the two main
reasons why young students read printed materials: for literary experience and for the
acquisition and use of information. To measure the ability of students to read for literary
experience, fictional texts are used; to measure students’ skills for acquiring and using
information, nonfictional texts are used.[3] In 2016, literary experience and acquiring and
using information each made up 50 percent of this aspect of the PIRLS reading assessment.
The second aspect of the PIRLS assessment component is processes of comprehension, which
describes how young readers interpret and make sense of text. In 2016, this aspect was
composed of four categories: focusing on and retrieving explicitly stated information (20
percent), making straightforward inferences (30 percent), interpreting and integrating ideas
and information (30 percent) and evaluating and critiquing content and textual elements (20
percent).
Both PIRLS and PIRLS Literacy devote half of the assessment passages to each of the
purposes for reading, while the ePIRLS online assessment focuses solely on reading to acquire
and use information. The ePIRLS approach simulates websites from the Internet, through
which students can navigate to accomplish school-based research projects or tasks. Because
PIRLS Literacy is designed for students earlier in the process of learning to read, a larger
percentage of items (50 percent of the assessment) is devoted to measuring foundational
reading comprehension processes
—
the ability to focus on and retrieve explicitly stated
information. Also, PIRLS Literacy has shorter reading passages with easier vocabulary and
syntax. The second component, background questionnaires, collects information on reading
behaviors and attitudes (the third aspect of reading literacy targeted by PIRLS), and helps to
provide a context for the performance scores. These questionnaires focus on such topics as
students’ attitudes and beliefs about learning, their habits and homework, and their lives both
in and outside of school; teachers’ attitudes and beliefs about teaching and learning, teaching
assignments, class size and organization, instructional practices, and participation in
professional development activities; and principals’ viewpoints on policy and budget
responsibilities, curriculum and instruction issues, and student behavior, as well as
descriptions of the organization of schools and courses. [4]
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