Department of Linguistics and Languages, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Applied Linguistics, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 11;16(3):e0243763. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243763. eCollection 2021.
What makes a literate person? What leads to literacy gains and losses within and between individuals and countries? This paper provides new evidence that helps answer these questions. The present comparative analysis of literacy is based on large representative samples from the Survey of Adult Skills conducted in 33 countries, with 25-65 year old participants. We provide, for the first time, estimates of relative importance for a comprehensive set of experiential factors, motivations, incentives, parental influence, demands of workplace, and other predictors of influence. We sketch a configuration of factors that predicts an "ideal" reader, i.e., the optimal literacy performance. Moreover, we discover a pivotal role of the age effect in predicting variability between countries. Countries with the highest literacy scores are the ones where literacy decreases with age the most strongly. We discuss this finding against current accounts of aging effects, cohort effects and others. Finally, we provide methodological recommendations for experimental studies of aging in cognitive tasks like reading.
是什么造就了一个有文化的人?是什么导致了个人和国家内部和之间的读写能力的提高和下降?本文提供了新的证据,有助于回答这些问题。本研究对读写能力的比较分析基于来自 33 个国家的成年人技能调查中的大型代表性样本,涵盖了 25-65 岁的参与者。我们首次提供了一系列经验因素、动机、激励、父母影响、工作场所需求和其他影响预测因素的相对重要性的估计。我们勾勒出一个可以预测“理想”读者(即最佳读写能力表现)的因素组合。此外,我们发现年龄效应在预测国家之间的差异方面起着关键作用。读写能力得分最高的国家是读写能力随年龄增长下降最明显的国家。我们将这一发现与当前关于衰老效应、队列效应和其他效应的解释进行了讨论。最后,我们为阅读等认知任务的衰老实验研究提供了方法学建议。