National Institute for Literacy
 

[NIFL-PLI] RE: Using NRS Data for Program Improvement

Mingle, Mary E. H. MMingle at lhup.edu
Tue May 25 09:01:03 EDT 2004


Larry,

Could you tell us more about the projects that are looking at the issues
you've described?

-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-pli-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-pli-bounces at nifl.gov] On
Behalf Of Sandy Strunk
Sent: Monday, May 24, 2004 8:14 PM
To: NIFL -PLI List
Subject: [NIFL-PLI] RE: Using NRS Data for Program Improvement



Date: 5/24/04 1:06 PM
From: Condelli, Larry
Hi David -

Computer literacy is an important skill and recognized as such by most
people in the field, including the Division of Adult Education and
Literacy staff at the Department of Education. We have struggled for
several years (and continue to do so) about ways to incorporate these
skills into the NRS at the national level.
To add them to the NRS we need three components: (1) a recognized,
accepted hierarchy of computer or technology skills appropriate for ABE
students, (2) a way to assess these skills, and (3) a policy for tying
the assessments into the NRS educational levels to define advancement.
When the NRS was first planned in 1996-97, the department did not think
that any of these components existed in a strong enough way to allow
the inclusion of the skills into the NRS. However, since that time there
has been a lot of work on defining the skill set related to technology
and computer use at different levels of proficiency and some assessments
have been developed. We have currently begun reviewing some of these
skill sets and approaches toward assessment for the NRS and there are
other Department of education-funded projects that are looking at these
issues. The Department is also planning to refine and broaden the
educational functioning level descriptors in the future and the incorpo!
ration of technology skills into the descriptors will be considered. So
at some point there may well be some inclusion of these skills in the
educational levels.

Of course, states may include technology-related skills into their local
and state accountability systems and several have already done so.

Larry Condelli

-----Original Message-----
From: David Rosen [mailto:djrosen at comcast.net]
Sent: Sunday, May 23, 2004 1:49 PM
To: Condelli, Larry
Subject: Re: [NIFL-PLI] Using NRS Data for Program Improvement


From: David Rosen <djrosen at comcast.net>
Date: Sun May 23, 2004 1:39:29 PM US/Eastern
To: nifl-pli at literacy.nifl.gov
Subject: Re: [NIFL-PLI] Using NRS Data for Program Improvement

To Larry Condelli:

Sandy Strunk posted a message to the NIFL-PLI list on May 10, 2004 from
Larry Condelli, Managing Director in the Education and Human Development
Division of the American Institues for Research, leader of the adult
education team, and project director for the National Reporting System,
in which Larry asks:

"What data do you need that NRS does not collect?"

The context of this and other questions in that message was using data
for program improvement.

I have recently been asked by a practitioner -- and not for the first
time -- if there are valid and reliable assessments for measuring
computer literacy -- that is, basic computer competence and comfort.
These are skills needed to use computer-assisted instruction, to word
process writing and to search for information on a CD or on the Web.

My understanding -- Larry please correct me I am wrong -- is that
computer literacy is not an area which is now measured through the NRS.
If it were, I am not sure we have valid, reliable, standardized
assessments. Do we?

Yet, I would argue that these skills are now as important to adult
learners as reading, writing and numeracy. They are required for many
jobs, and for participation in computer-based distance learning. Many
programs offer these skills because students have asked to learn them.
Programs, students, and employers wonder how programs are doing in
helping students learn these skills.

Can the NRS include these skills?

David J. Rosen
djrosen at comcast.net


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