Is the Literacy Achievement of Teenage Boys Poorer Than That of Teenage Girls, or Do Estimates of Gender Gaps Depend on the Test?

Periodical
Journal of Educational Psychology
Volume
114
Year
2022
Issue number
2
Page range
239–256
Access date
May 31, 2023
Relates to study/studies
PIAAC Cycle 1

Is the Literacy Achievement of Teenage Boys Poorer Than That of Teenage Girls, or Do Estimates of Gender Gaps Depend on the Test?

 A Comparison of PISA and PIAAC

Abstract

Data from international large-scale assessments (ILSAs) of schooled populations indicate that boys have considerably poorer literacy skills than girls. New evidence from a household-based ILSAOrganisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC)—indicates that the gender gap in literacy is negligible, even though its assessment framework is similar to that of one of the most widely used school-based assessments, the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA). Individual-level data from 15-, 16-, and 17-year-old teens in countries that administered both assessments were used to estimate and compare literacy gender gaps in the two assessments, after accounting for differences in target population, response rates, scoring scheme, test length, mode of delivery, prevalence of items involving different stimuli in the two assessments (e.g., types of texts), and cognitive processes test-takers need to engage in to solve assessment items (e.g., accessing and retrieving information or reflecting and evaluating information presented in the text). These differences explain only part of the differences across the two studies in estimated literacy gender gaps: Even when these factors are considered, gender gaps remain large in PISA and small (though imprecisely estimated) in PIAAC. The potential roles of test-taking motivation and administration conditions in explaining differences across the studies and implications for research and policy are discussed.