Part A PIRLS 2021 MS Data Collection v16

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Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS 2021) Main Study Data Collection

OMB: 1850-0645

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Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS 2021) Main study Data Collection





OMB# 1850-0645 v.16









Supporting Statement Part A







National Center for Education Statistics

U.S. Department of Education

Institute of Education Sciences

Washington, DC





November 2020

revised July 2021




TABLE OF CONTENTS



PREFACE 2


A. JUSTIFICATION





APPENDICES

A1: PIRLS 2021 Main Study Communication Materials


A2: PIRLS 2021 MS Materials for Data Collection Activities


B: PIRLS 2021 Non-response Bias Analysis Plan


C: PIRLS 2021 Main Study U.S. Questionnaires




PREFACE



The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) is an international assessment of fourth-grade students’ achievement in reading. PIRLS reports on four benchmarks in reading achievement at grade 4 (Advanced, High, Medium, and Low) and on a variety of issues related to the education context for the students in the sample, including instructional practices, school resources, curriculum implementation, and learning supports outside of school. Since its inception in 2001, PIRLS has continued to assess students every 5 years (2001, 2006, 2011, and 2016), with the next PIRLS assessment, PIRLS 2021, being the fifth iteration of the study. Participation in this study by the United States at regular intervals provides data on student achievement and on current and past education policies and a comparison of U.S. education policies and student performance with those of the U.S. international counterparts. In PIRLS 2016, 58 education systems participated. The U.S. will participate in PIRLS 2021 to continue to monitor the progress of its students compared to that of other nations and to provide data on factors that may influence student achievement.

PIRLS is coordinated by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA), an international collective of research organizations and government agencies that create the assessment framework, the assessment instrument, and background questionnaires. The IEA decides and agrees upon a common set of standards and procedures for collecting and reporting PIRLS data, and defines the studies’ timeline, all of which must be followed by all participating countries. As a result, PIRLS is able to provide a reliable and comparable measure of student skills in participating countries. In the U.S., the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) conducts this study, with support from U.S. Department of Education contractors, and works with the IEA to ensure proper implementation of the study and adoption of practices in adherence to the IEA’s standards. Participation in PIRLS allows NCES to meet its mandate of acquiring and disseminating data on educational activities and student achievement in the U.S. compared with foreign nations [The Educational Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002) 20 U.S.C. §9543].

Compared to PIRLS 2016, PIRLS 2021 differs in that it offers a redesigned digital format, referred to as digitalPIRLS to distinguish it from the traditional paper-and-pencil format, called paperPIRLS, which will still be available to countries. As the U.S. will be administering the digital version of PIRLS, in this submission all discussion of PIRLS 2021 refers to digitalPIRLS unless otherwise specified. The other difference to note is that in an effort to reduce the burden on schools and students, the assessment will be administered for one day only (rather than over two days as was done in 2016 when ePIRLS was administered for the first time independently). Given the transition to a digitally based assessment (DBA) for PIRLS, a bridge study between the two PIRLS formats will be conducted by the IEA during the main study. This design will require that approximately 1,500 students will be administered the paperPIRLS booklets, which will increase the sample size required during the main study.

In preparation for the PIRLS 2021 main study, all countries are asked to implement a field test in 2020 in order to evaluate new assessment items and background questions, to ensure practices that promote low exclusion rates, and to ensure that classroom and student sampling procedures proposed for the main study are successful. In selecting a school sample for this purpose, it is important to minimize the burden on schools, districts, and states, while also ensuring that the field test data are collected effectively. PIRLS staff will work to help respondents understand the study’s value relative to the burden imposed, and to ensure a high level of school participation.

Data collection for the field test in the U.S. occurs from March 1 through April 15, 2020 and involves a sample of 45 public schools and about 1,650 students (selecting two classes from each school). The U.S PIRLS 2021 main study involves a nationally-representative sample of 290 schools and about 9,280 students. Main study data collection was originally scheduled to be completed in Spring 2021, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic the main study has been delayed and will be conducted from September through October 2021.

The submission describing the overarching plan for all phases of the data collection, including the 2021 main study, and requesting approval for all activities, materials, and response burden related to the field test recruitment was approved in April 2019 with a change request in September 2019 (OMB# 1850-0645 v.11-12)1, while the submission describing all aspects of the field test and recruitment for the main study was approved in October 2019 (OMB# 1850-0645 v.13). The submission for all aspects of the PIRLS 2021 main study, including data collection activities, with an accompanying 30-day public comment period was approved in May 2020. The submission to update COVID-19 related changes in the sampling population and data collection materials related to the changes was approved in February 2021. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and under guidance from the IEA, this submission requests emergency clearance, and includes further changes associated with the cancellation of the teacher questionnaire and modifications to the school questionnaire, and modifications recruitment and data collection materials. The supporting statements Parts A and B describe all aspects of the study; Appendices A1 and A2 provide the main study communication materials and additional materials related to the data collection activities, respectively; Appendix B provides the non-response bias analysis plan for the main study; Appendix C provides the questionnaires for the Main Study.

Because PIRLS is a collaborative effort among many parties, the U.S. must adhere to the international schedule set forth by the IEA, including the availability of draft and final questionnaires. In order to meet the international data collection schedule for the fall 2021 main study, recruitment activities are scheduled to start in August of 2021, to align with recruitment for other NCES studies [e.g., Organization Program for International Student Assessment (PISA)], and for schools to put the assessment on their calendars.

A. Justification

A.1 Importance of Information

Benchmarking of U.S. student achievement against other countries continues to be of high interest to education policymakers and informs policy discussions of economic competitiveness and workforce and post-secondary preparedness. PIRLS provides a unique opportunity to compare U.S. students’ reading knowledge and skills at fourth grade with that of their peers in countries around the world. The continuation of U.S. participation allows for the study of past and current education policies that have shaped reading achievement over the past 20 years. Furthermore, participating countries are not only able to obtain information about students' knowledge and abilities, but also about the cultural environments, teaching practices, curriculum goals, and institutional arrangements that are associated with student achievement.

PIRLS complements what we learn from national assessments such as the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) by identifying the strengths and weaknesses of student reading achievement relative to participating countries around the world. It provides valuable benchmarking information about educational policies enacted in other countries and policies that could be applied to U.S. educational practices.

Based on earlier PIRLS data releases, it is likely that the results of these studies will draw great attention in the U.S. and elsewhere. It is therefore expected that PIRLS will contribute to ongoing national and international debates and efforts to improve reading learning and achievement.

A.2 Purposes and Uses of Data

PIRLS assesses reading knowledge and skills at grade 4. PIRLS is designed to align broadly with curricula in the participating countries. The results, therefore, suggest the degree to which students have learned concepts and skills likely to have been taught in school. PIRLS also collects background information on students, teachers, schools, curricula, and official education policies to allow cross-national comparison of educational contexts that may be related to student achievement.

Data compiled and collected from PIRLS 2021 allows for evidence-based decisions to be made for educational improvement. Each successive participation in PIRLS provides trend information about student achievement in reading relative to other countries, as well as indicators that show how this achievement relates to demographic and curricular, school, teacher, and student factors that provide the educational context for achievement. These high-quality, internationally comparative trend data are key in informing education policy discussions.

Through the participation in PIRLS and other international assessment programs, NCES is able to provide comparative indicators on student performance and school practices across countries in order to benchmark U.S. student performance, and to suggest hypotheses about the relationship between student performance and factors that may influence performance as well as areas in which students have strengths or weaknesses. The international studies identify differences among countries over time in instructional practices, school policies, and opportunity-to-learn that can inform discussions about how to improve students’ ability to read.

This collection of data is consistent with the NCES mandate, which specifies that "The purpose of the Center [NCES] shall be to collect and analyze and disseminate statistics and other information related to education in the U.S. and in other nations." [§406 of the General Education Provisions Act, as amended (20 U.S.C. 1221e-1)]. ESRA 2002 (20 U.S.C., §9543) also mandates that NCES shall collect, report, analyze, and disseminate statistical data related to education in the U.S. and in other nations, including acquiring and disseminating data on educational activities and student achievement in the U.S. compared with foreign nations.

PIRLS 2021 Components

The reading assessment is organized around a content dimension that specifies the subject matter to be assessed and a cognitive dimension that specifies the thinking processes to be assessed. PIRLS assesses two purposes for reading that fourth-grade students typically engage in: reading for literary experience and reading to acquire and use information. PIRLS also assesses four broad processes of comprehension predominantly used by fourth-grade readers: focusing on and retrieving explicitly stated information; making straightforward inferences; interpreting and integrating ideas and information; and evaluating and critiquing content and textual elements. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. will be assessing students in fall 2021 instead of the originally scheduled spring 2021. Under the guidance from IEA, students who are beginning the fifth grade in fall 2021 will be assessed in this special fall administration of PIRLS. The PIRLS 2021 framework is similar to 2016 but has been slightly updated to provide more specificity for item writers, and to better reflect current curricula in participating countries. There were no revisions to the content domains or cognitive domains, nor were there changes to the target percentages for either domain.

Assessment Instruments

To minimize burden and ensure broad subject-matter coverage, PIRLS will use a matrix sampling approach where the reading items are organized into sets for administration. For the bridge study to be conducted during the main study, the paper-and-pencil reading test will also use a matrix sampling approach with the items organized in a set of test booklets, with each student receiving only one booklet. This design is consistent with past practice.

Questionnaires

The background questionnaires for PIRLS 2021 were developed to address the issues outlined in the PIRLS context questionnaire framework. The U.S. is adapting the questions to fit the U.S. education context, as appropriate, including adding a few questions, such as about the race/ethnicity of students.

School Questionnaire. A representative from each participating school will be asked to provide information on reading resources, teacher availability and retention, principal leadership, school emphasis on academic success, school climate, and parental involvement in school activities. These questionnaires will be offered online, with a paper-and-pencil backup.

Teacher Questionnaire. Reading teachers of students in selected classes will be asked to complete a teacher questionnaire, which will include questions about teacher preparation and experience, reading instruction, instructional resources and technology, instructional time, instructional engagement, and classroom assessment. These questionnaires will be offered online, with a paper-and-pencil backup. Although the Teacher Questionnaires were administered in the PIRLS 2021 Field Test, they will not be included as part of the Main Study administration in Fall 2021. Student Questionnaire. Student information will be collected about home resources, motivation, self-concept, self-efficacy, and student characteristics such as gender and race/ethnicity. It should be administered to all students who have received parental permission to participate in PIRLS. Student questionnaire for digitalPIRLS will be administered via the student assessment player after the achievement assessment. For the PIRLS 2021 main study, students in the paperPIRLS bridge study will complete the student questionnaire as part of the paper booklet after the achievement assessment.

A.3 Improved Information Technology (Reduction of Burden)

Each participating nation is expected to adhere to the internationally prescribed design. In the U.S., the school and teacher questionnaires will be made available to school administrators and teachers online as the main mode of administration, with a paper-and-pencil backup to facilitate user preference for participation. The online questionnaires will be provided on the secure Westat data server. A communication website will be used for PIRLS 2021 during the field test and main study to provide a simple, single source of information to engage and maintain high levels of school involvement. This portal will be used throughout the assessment cycle to inform schools of their tasks and to provide them with easy access to information tailored for their anticipated needs. We plan to gather class and student lists from participating schools electronically using a secure electronic filing process. Electronic filing is an electronic system for submitting lists of student information, including student background information in school records. The electronic filing system provides advantageous features, such as efficiency and data quality checks.

A.4 Efforts to Identify Duplication

In the U.S., reading achievement is systematically assessed at (1) the Federal level, where trend data have been collected on a fairly regular basis since 1971 through the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP); (2) the state level, where data are routinely collected as part of state testing programs, though they vary across the states in terms of the frequency of testing, age/grades tested, and types of cognitive items administered; and (3) the district level, where data are collected through the use of commercially or locally developed standardized tests as well as tests developed in conjunction with the instructional programs used in schools. PIRLS 2021 does not duplicate these assessments.

PIRLS 2021 is part of a program of international cooperative studies of educational achievement supported and funded, in part, by the U.S. Department of Education. These studies represent U.S. participation in international studies involving 55 to over 70 countries each. As part of international cooperative studies, the U.S. must collect the same information at the same time as the other nations for purposes of making both valid international comparisons with other countries and with the previous PIRLS data. While some studies in the U.S. collect similar, though not identical, kinds of information (e.g., NAEP), the data from those studies cannot be substituted for the information collected in PIRLS in that they do not allow for comparisons outside the U.S. Furthermore, the data collected through PIRLS is based on a unique framework that is not shared by any other state, national, or international data collection effort. In order to participate in these international studies, the U.S. must agree to administer the same core instruments that are administered in other countries. Because the items measuring reading achievement have been developed with intensive international coordination, any changes to the instruments require international coordination and approval.

A.5 Minimizing Burden for Small Entities

The school samples for PIRLS contain small-, medium- and large-size schools, including private schools, selected based on probability proportionate to their size. All school sizes are needed to ensure an appropriate representation of each type of school in the selected sample of schools. The burden will be minimized wherever possible. In addition, staff will conduct all test administrations and will assist with parental notification, sampling, and other tasks as much as possible within each school. The assessment will be administered to intact classes to minimize disruption to school schedules.

A.6 Frequency of Data Collection

The field test data collection is scheduled for March 1 through April 15, 2020, and the main study data collection (originally scheduled for March through June 2021) has recently been rescheduled for September through October 2021. This schedule is prescribed by the international collective for PIRLS, and adherence to this schedule is necessary to establish consistency in survey operations among participating countries as well as to maintain trend lines.

A.7 Special Circumstances

None of the special circumstances identified in the Instructions for Supporting Statement apply to the PIRLS study.

A.8 Consultations outside NCES

Consultations outside NCES have been extensive and will continue throughout the life of the project. The IEA studies are developed as a cooperative enterprise involving all participating countries. An international panel of reading and measurement experts provide substantive and technical guidance for the study and National Research Coordinators participate in extensive discussions concerning the projects, usually with advice from the national subject matter and testing experts. In addition, the IEA convened a panel of reading experts from around the world to develop cognitive items.

The majority of the consultations (outside NCES) have involved the TIMSS & PIRLS International Study Center at Boston College in the U.S. Key to these ongoing consultations are: Dirk Hastedt (Executive Director of the IEA), Michael Martin, Ina V.S. Mullis, and Pierre Foy, all of whom have extensive experience in developing and operating international education surveys (especially related to PIRLS).

A.9 Payments or Gifts to Respondents

In order to achieve acceptable school response rates, schools have historically been offered incentives to participate and as a thank you for the time they invest in and the space they make available for the international assessments. High response rates are required by both IEA and NCES, and are difficult to achieve in school-based studies. The U.S. has historically had difficulties in achieving sufficient participation levels. As in PIRLS 2016, in PIRLS 2021 schools will be offered $200 for participation. Furthermore, to address challenges that may be encountered with securing school cooperation, we will utilize a second-tier incentive during the main study that will allow us to offer up to $800 to schools that are historically very difficult to recruit. This second-tier incentive will be offered only to:

  • Private schools in the original sample or substitute private schools (e.g., in ICILS 2018, only 40% of original private schools participated, with the overall rate of about 57% after substitutes were added);

  • Public schools that are selected to participate in NAEP 2021 and also selected for PIRLS 2021 (typically these schools participate only in NAEP because it is required, and refuse participation in PIRLS; there are about 40 such schools nationwide);

  • All substitute schools (typically, refusals by original schools occur in the mid to late fall prior to the assessment in the spring, at which point substitute schools are recruited; recruitment of substitutes is typically very challenging (less than 25% participate) because recruitment is late, after the school year has begun and school calendars are set; also, some states refuse to recruit schools this late in the school year); and

  • Refusing original schools if it is necessary to meet international participation requirements.

A similar second-tier recruitment strategy has been used in other international studies conducted by NCES. Most recently, in TIMSS 2019, we offered the second-tier incentive to the aforementioned groups. We were able to successfully recruit over 85% of eligible schools, which was the target recruitment percentage. We expect the extra incentive strategy to be successful in the PIRLS main study as well.

The school staff serving as School Coordinators will receive $100 for their time and effort in coordinating the PIRLS assessment. The School Coordinator serves a critical role in data collection, functioning as the central school contact, and facilitating arrangements for the assessments. They are asked to file class and student listing forms; arrange the date, time, and space for the assessment; and disseminate information to parents and students.

Consistent with prior administrations of PIRLS, as a token of appreciation for their participation, the students will receive a small gift valued at approximately $4. In PIRLS 2016, each participating student received a small sports wristwatch, a pencil imprinted with “USA”, and a certificate with their name thanking them for participating in and representing the United States in PIRLS 2016. Similarly priced items will be distributed to participating students for the PIRLS 2021 data collection. Some schools also offer recognition parties with pizza or other treats for students who participate; however, these are not reimbursed by NCES or Westat.

In the PIRLS field test, teachers were offered a $20 Amazon gift card for completing the PIRLS teacher questionnaire; in the PIRLS main study, there will be no teacher questionnaire. Historically, participation is high among school administrators without offering incentives; therefore, no incentive will be offered for completion of the school administrator questionnaire.

A.10 Assurance of Confidentiality

Data security and confidentiality protection procedures have been put in place for PIRLS to ensure that Westat, the PIRLS contractor for the U.S. and its subcontractors, comply with all privacy requirements, including:

  1. The statement of work of PIRLS contract;

  2. Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. §552a);

  3. Family Educational and Privacy Act (FERPA) of 1974 (20 U.S.C. §1232(g));

  4. Privacy Act Regulations (34 CFR Part 5b);

  5. Computer Security Act of 1987;

  6. U.S.A. Patriot Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-56);

  7. Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9573);

  8. Confidential Information Protect and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002;

  9. E-Government Act of 2002, Title V, Subtitle A;

  10. Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015 (6 U.S.C. §151);

  11. The U.S. Department of Education General Handbook for Information Technology Security General Support Systems and Major Applications Inventory Procedures (March 2005);

  12. The U.S. Department of Education Incident Handling Procedures (February 2009);

  13. The U.S. Department of Education, ACS Directive OM: 5-101, Contractor Employee Personnel Security Screenings;

  14. NCES Statistical Standards; and

  15. All new legislation that impacts the data collected through the inter-agency agreement for this study.

Furthermore, Westat will comply with the Department’s IT security policy requirements as set forth in the Handbook for Information Assurance Security Policy and related procedures and guidance, as well as IT security requirements in the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA), Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) publications, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circulars, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) standards and guidance. All data products and publications will also adhere to the revised NCES Statistical Standards, as described at the website: http://nces.ed.gov/statprog/2012/.

The laws pertaining to the collection and use of personally identifiable information are clearly communicated in correspondence with states, districts, schools, teachers, students, and parents. Letters and information materials will be sent to parents and school administrators describing the study, its voluntary nature, and the extent to which respondents and their responses will be kept confidential (see copies in appendix A).

Letters and supporting materials will read:

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is authorized to conduct this study under the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9543), and to collect students’ education records from educational agencies or institutions for the purpose of evaluating federally supported education programs under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA, 34 CFR §§ 99.31(a)(3)(iii) and 99.35). All of the information [you provide/ provided by school staff and students] may be used only for statistical purposes and may not be disclosed, or used, in identifiable form for any other purpose except as required by law (20 U.S.C. §9573 and 6 U.S.C. §151). In the United States, PIRLS is conducted by NCES, part of the U.S. Department of Education, and the data are being collected by Westat. The U.S. Office of Management and Budget has approved the data collection under OMB # 1850-0645.

The following statement will appear on the login page for PIRLS and the front cover of the printed questionnaires (the phrase “search existing data resources, gather the data needed” will not be included on the student questionnaire):

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is authorized to conduct this study under the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9543), and to collect students’ education records from educational agencies or institutions for the purpose of evaluating federally supported education programs under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA, 34 CFR §§ 99.31(a)(3)(iii) and 99.35). All of the information you provide may be used only for statistical purposes and may not be disclosed, or used, in identifiable form for any other purpose except as required by law (20 U.S.C. §9573 and 6 U.S.C. §151).

According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required to respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this voluntary information collection is 1850-0645. The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average [XX] minutes per [respondent type], including the time to review instructions [, search existing data resources, gather the data needed,] and complete and review the information collection. If you have any comments or concerns regarding the accuracy of the time estimate(s), suggestions for improving the form, or questions about the status of your individual submission of this form, write directly to: Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS), National Center for Education Statistics, Potomac Center Plaza, 550 12th Street, SW, 4th floor, Washington, DC 20202.

OMB No. 1850-0645, Approval Expires 11/30/2022.

The PIRLS 2021 confidentiality plan includes signing confidentiality agreements and notarized nondisclosure affidavits by all contractor and subcontractor personnel and field workers who will have access to individual identifiers. Also included in the plan is personnel training regarding the meaning of confidentiality, particularly as it relates to handling requests for information and providing assurance to respondents about the protection of their responses; controlled and protected access to computer files under the control of a single database manager; built-in safeguards concerning status monitoring and receipt control systems; and a secured and operator-manned in-house computing facility. Data files, accompanying the software, and documentation will be delivered to NCES at the end of the project. Neither names nor addresses will be included in any data file. In digitalPIRLS, students log into the automated assessment using non-identifying ID’s, and thus, the resulting data are collected and stored with only the non-identifying PIRLS assigned ID.

NCES understands the legal and ethical need to protect the privacy of the PIRLS respondents and has extensive experience in developing data files for release that meet the government’s requirements to protect individually identifiable data from disclosure. Westat will conduct a thorough disclosure analysis of the PIRLS 2021 data when preparing the data files for use by researchers, in compliance with ESRA 2002 (20 U.S.C. §9573). Schools with high disclosure risk will be identified and, to ensure that individuals may not be identified from the data files, a variety of masking strategies will be used, including swapping data and omitting key identification variables (i.e., school name and address) from both the public- and restricted-use files (though the restricted-use file will include an NCES school ID that can be linked to other NCES databases to identify a school); omitting key identification variables such as state or ZIP Code from the public-use file; and collapsing or developing categories for continuous variables to retain information for analytic purposes while preserving confidentiality in public-use files.

A.11 Sensitive Questions

The questionnaires do not have items considered to be of a sensitive nature.

A.12 Estimates of Burden

This package shows the estimated burden to respondents for all PIRLS 2021 activities. For the field test, in order to assess the minimum required 1,400 students, we will sample 45 schools and 1,650 students (sampled from two randomly selected classes per school). For the main study, in order to assess the minimum required 5,000 students from 150 schools for the digitalPIRLS plus 1,500 students from 50 schools for the bridge study paperPIRLS, we will sample 290 schools and about 9,280 students. The time required for students to respond to the assessment (cognitive items) portion of the study and associated directions are shown in gray italicized font and are not included in the totals because they are not subject to the PRA. The burden estimates also include burden for: (1) contacting states, districts, schools, and parents in order to recruit for the PIRLS field test and main study, including: (a) sending recruitment letters to districts and schools selected for each study, (b) contacting and seeking research approvals from special handling districts, where applicable, and (c) notifying parents of sampled students about their participation in either study; and (2) collecting data and reviewing lists submitted by school coordinators. Burden estimates for the field test data collection and all aspects of the main study data are not requested at this time and are provided in Table A.1 for information purposes.

The district and school contact letters for the field test and main study are assumed to impose a small burden on all contacted parties, both those that refuse and those that agree to participate in the PIRLS studies. Thus, the burden hours for this activity are based on the total number of districts and schools contacted rather than the total number agreeing to participate.

The special handling districts are those known to require completion of a research application before they will allow schools under their jurisdiction to participate in a study. Based on an initial assessment of previous PIRLS data collections, we estimate that there may be up to 10 special handling districts in the sample. Contacting special handling districts begins with updating district information based on what can be gleaned from online sources. Calls are then placed to verify the information about where to send the completed required research application forms, and, if necessary, to collect contact information for this process. During the call, an inquiry is also made about the amount of time the districts spend reviewing similar research applications. The estimated number of such districts represents those with particularly detailed application forms and lengthy processes for approval. This operation should begin in the spring of the year preceding the start of the data collection to allow sufficient time for special handling districts’ review processes. We will continue to work with these districts until we receive a final response from each district (approval or denial of request) up until March 1, 2021 for the main study.

The total burden estimate for the main study and field test recruitment is based on 10 minutes for districts to read materials and respond, 20 minutes for schools to read materials and respond, 120 minutes for district IRB staff review, 60 minutes for district IRB panel approval, and 10 minutes for parents to read and review recruitment materials and notification forms. The total burden estimate for the main study and field test data collection is based on 40 minutes for each questionnaire (school administrator, teacher, and student) plus 240 for all school coordinator activities. The total student session is estimated to take up to 2.5 hours, including 10 minutes for instructions, two 40-minute assessment sessions, two 5-minute breaks following each assessment, the 40-minute questionnaire, and up to 10 minutes for students to be seated and refocused after breaks.

Based on the estimated hourly rates for principals/administrators, school coordinators, teachers, and parents of $46.85, $29.25, $29.25, and $24.34, respectively2, and the federal minimum wage of $7.25 as the hourly rate for students, and based on the estimated total of 7,024 burden hours for PIRLS main study data collection, the associated total estimated respondent burden time cost is $77,654.



Table A.1. Burden estimates for PIRLS 2021 Field Test and Main Study.

Activity

Sample size

Expected response rate

Number of respondents

Number of responses

Per respondent (minutes)

Total burden (hours)

Field Test Recruitment

Contacting Districts

45

1

45

45

10

8

Contacting Schools

45

1

45

45

20

15

District IRB Staff Study Approval

5

1

5

5

120

10

District IRB Panel Study Approval

30

1

30

30

60

30

Parental notification

1,650

1

1,650

1,650

10

275

Total Field Test Recruitment

 

 

1,775

1,775

 

338

Field Test Data Collection

Student

Assessment digitalPIRLS

1,650

0.85

1,403

1,403

80

1,871

Directions

1,650

0.85

1,403

1,403

10

234

Student Questionnaire

1,650

0.85

1,403

1,403

40

936

School Staff

School Administrator

45

0.95

43

43

40

29

Teacher (2 per school)

90

0.95

86

86

40

57

School Coordinator

45

1

45

45

240

180

Total Field Test Data Collection

 

 

1,577

2,980

 

1,436

Total Field Test

 

 

3,352

4,755

 

1,774

Main Study Recruitment

Contacting Districts

290

1.00

290

290

10

49

School Recruitment (Original Schools)

290

0.70

203

203

20

68

School Recruitment (Replacement Schools)

80

0.50

40

40

20

14

District IRB Staff Study Approval

30

1.00

30

30

120

60

District IRB Panel Study Approval

180

1.00

180

180

60

180

Parental notification

11,600

0.80

9,280

9,280

10

1,547

Total Main Study Recruitment



10,023

10,023


1,918

Main Study Data Collection

Student

Assessment digitalPIRLS

7,280

0.85

6,188

6,188

80

8,251

Bridge study paperPIRLS assessment

2,000

0.85

1,700

1,700

80

2,267

Directions

9,280

0.85

7,888

7,888

10

1,315

Student Questionnaire

9,280

0.85

7,888

7,888

35

4,602

School Staff

School Administrator

243

0.95

231

231

35

135

School Coordinator

243

1.00

243

243

240

972

Total Main Study Data Collection



8,362

16,250


7,024

Total Main Study



18,385

26,273


8,942

Total Burden for Field Test

and Main Study



21,737

31,028


10,716

Note: Burden in grey font represents carried over burden approved in previous submissions; all burden for this project was requested and approved in v.14 of this package. Burden for student assessments is shown in italicized font and are not included in the burden total because cognitive assessments are not subject to PRA. The totals in the “Number of respondents” column do not include duplicate counts of respondents.


A.13 Total Annual Cost Burden

No cost to respondents is anticipated beyond the estimated burden cost described in Section A.12.



A.14 Annualized Cost to Federal Government

The cost to the Federal Government for conducting the PIRLS 2021 field test is estimated to be $1,832,621 over a 2-year period. All direct and indirect costs for this study are valued at an estimated $6,765,955 over five years, from March 2019 to March 2024.

Table A-2. Estimated costs for PIRLS 2021 main study data collection

Components with breakdown

Estimated costs

FIELD TEST (2020)

 

      NCES salaries and expenses

101,400

      Recruitment

410,146

      Preparations (e.g., adapting instruments, sampling)

244,480

      Data collection, scoring, and coding

1,076,595

Field Test Total

$1,832,621

MAIN STUDY (2021)

 

      NCES salaries and expenses

202,800

      Recruitment

469,443

      Preparations (e.g., adapting instruments, sampling) (current package component)

293,974

      Data collection, scoring, and coding (current package component)

3,206,494

Reporting and dissemination

760,623

Main Study Total

$4,933,334

Grand total for PIRLS 2021

$6,765,955

Total Request in this Submission (current package components)

$3,500,468



A.15 Program Changes or Adjustments

The decrease in burden time is because this submission includes the cancellation of the teacher questionnaire component of the study.

With regards to content, PIRLS 2021 differs from PIRLS 2016 in that PIRLS 2021 will be administered as a DBA (digitalPIRLS). Additionally, for the main study, some students will be administered digitalPIRLS and some students will be administered the booklet form of paperPIRLS for the purpose of the bridge study. Furthermore, PIRLS 2021 will be administered to students on one day, rather than on two as was done in 2016.

A.16 Plans for Tabulation and Publication

The PIRLS field test is designed to provide a statistical review of the performance of items on the cognitive assessment and questionnaires in preparation for the main study data collection.

Based on the data collected in the main study, the TIMSS & PIRLS International Study Center will prepare a report to be released in December 2022. As has been customary, NCES plans to also release a report at the same time as the international report is released, interpreting the results for the U.S. audience. NCES reports on initial data releases are generally limited to simple bivariate statistics. There are currently no plans to conduct complex statistical analyses of PIRLS 2021 dataset. An example of the past PIRLS report can be found at https://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2018017. After the release of the international report, the International Study Center will also prepare a technical report, describing the design and development of the assessment as well as the scaling procedures, weighting procedures, missing value imputation, and analyses. After the release of the international data, NCES plans to release the national data and an accompanying User’s Guide for the study.

Electronic versions of each publication are made available on the NCES website. Schedules for tabulation and publication of PIRLS 2021 results in the U.S. are dependent upon receiving data files from the international sponsoring organization. With this in mind, the expected data collection dates and a tentative reporting schedule are as follows:

Dates

Activity

August 2019—January 2020

Prepare data collection manuals, forms, assessment materials, questionnaires

October 2019—February 2020

Contact and gain cooperation of states, districts, and schools for field test

February 2020—March 2020

Sample classes and collect student lists

March 1, 2020—April 15, 2020

Collect field test data

May 15, 2020

Deliver raw data to international sponsoring organization

July 2020—August 2020

Review field test results

September 2020—August 2021

Prepare for the main study/recruit schools

September 2021—October 2021

Collect main study data

November 2021

Deliver perturbed data to international sponsoring organization

February 2023

PIRLS 2021 International Database distributed by international sponsoring organization

January 2022—December 2024

Produce report



A.17 Display OMB Expiration Date

The OMB expiration date will be displayed on all data collection materials.

A.18 Exceptions to Certification Statement

No exceptions to the certifications are requested.

1 The materials that will be used in the 2021 main study will be based on the field test materials. Additionally, the v.11-12 submissions were designed to adequately justify the need for and overall practical utility of the full study and to present the overarching plan for all of the phases of the data collection, providing as much detail about the measures to be used as was available at the time of those submission. As part of the v.11 submission, NCES published a notice in the Federal Register allowing first a 60- and then a 30-day public comment period. For subsequent submissions covering the details of the field test data collection and all aspects of the main study, including the v.14 submission, NCES published a notice in the Federal Register allowing an additional 30-day public comment period.

2 The average hourly earnings of principals/education administrators in the May 2017 National Occupational and Employment Wage Estimates sponsored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is $46.85, for school coordinators and teachers is $29.25, and of parents is $24.34. Where mean hourly wage was not provided, it was computed from the mean annual wage assuming 2,080 hours per year. The student wage is based on the federal minimum wage. Source: BLS Occupation Employment Statistics, http://data.bls.gov/oes/ data type: Occupation codes: Education Administrators, Elementary and Secondary Schools (11-9032), Education School Teachers, Except Special Education (25-2021), and all employees (00-0000); accessed on December 7, 2018.


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