Research on Adult Literacy: A History
of Investment in American Adults
IES: 9.24.2020
Reading is fundamental, but it is also difficult to master, taking thousands of hours of instruction and practice. Roughly 52 percent of U.S. adults over the age of 16 may struggle with everyday literacy tasks. Of these adults, approximately 20 percent may perform at very low levels of literacy. For adults who are still mastering of this skill, the task can seem overwhelming.
As
part of our commemoration of National
Adult Education and Family Literacy Week (September 20-26, 2020), we
would like to recognize the history of adult literacy research at IES and its
National Center for Education Research.
Since
2004, IES-funded researchers have been developing
assessments to help identify the needs of adults struggling with
literacy and working on solutions to build adult literacy skills. This work fed
into the measurement
component of IES’s Reading for Understanding Initiative in 2010 and
later returned back to addressing adult basic literacy
measurement in 2016.
In
2012, IES funded the Center for
the Study of Adult Literacy (CSAL), which developed a curriculum and
technology for adults reading between the 3rd- and 8th-grade levels. CSAL
demonstrates how adult literacy research benefits by integrating research
conducted with students with disabilities and those in K-12 and postsecondary
settings. In fact, the researchers pulled upon findings from eight prior IES
grants funded by NCER and NCSER.
Our
researchers are also developing a clearer picture of the adults who fall into
the broad category of those with low literacy. They are leveraging the PIAAC data set to conduct
exploratory work that informs both our understanding of those at the
very low ends of literacy and also of whether basic skills may
predict success in
postsecondary career and technical education programs.
In
2020, IES funded additional development research to help refine an interactive,
online reading comprehension program, AutoTutor for
Adult Reading Comprehension (AT-ARC). Another project will recruit
and train
postdoctoral fellows to cultivate the next generation of researchers
who can continue to build a research base for improving adult literacy
outcomes.
Although
IES researchers are making great strides to build knowledge, the field needs
more information, and adult learners deserve tools and innovations developed
for their specific needs and goals. IES hopes to continue to support such work.
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