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Afghan Children Reading (ACR) was a USAID reading program implemented in Afghanistan from 2016 to 2021. In 2017, an Early Grade Reading Assessment (EGRA) was conducted in three pilot provinces (Herat for the Dari language, and Nangarhar and Laghman for the Pashto language) in order to generate actionable data on the state of reading outcomes.

This EGR Barometer data represents the 2017 baseline EGRA. A follow-up midline EGRA as conducted in 2018. The baseline EGRA was never conducted.

EGRA Subtasks

An EGRA measures children’s pre-reading and reading skills. The subtasks used in this assessment are described below.

Oral Reading Fluency (ORF)

The oral reading fluency (ORF) subtask measures how quickly and accurately a student can read. It is a core component of EGRA because it brings together lower-level reading skills (such as decoding and familiar word recognition) with how quickly and easily the student can read a given word (called automaticity).

Students were given a short, written passage (66 words) on a topic that was familiar to them. They were asked to read it out loud “quickly but carefully” and were given 60 seconds from when they begin to read. The EGRA administrator timed the student, making note of any mistakes the student made while reading the words aloud. The score is reported as correct words per minute (cwpm).

Listening Comprehension

Comprehension is the main goal of reading—understanding what is read. Comprehension is a complex task that requires some ability in all other reading skills.

In this subtask, the EGRA administrator read a passage to the student, who did not see it. The student then responded to questions or statements read by the EGRA administrator. The listening comprehension score is the total correct answers, with a maximum possible score of five.

Initial Sound

The initial sound subtask is a measure of a student’s ability to identify the first sound in a word. It also measures a student’s ability to separate words into sounds and to manipulate those sounds.

Students were told a word verbally and asked to isolate and pronounce the first sound of the word (the initial sound). The EGRA administrator recorded the number of correct letter sounds identified, with a maximum possible score of 10.

Syllable Sounds

The syllable identification subtask tests students’ ability to recognize syllables.

The students were presented with a grid of syllables and asked to pronounce as many of the syllables’ sounds as possible. The EGRA administrator timed the child and recorded the number of correct syllable sounds per minute (cspm).

Nonwords

The nonword subtask tests students’ skill in using letter-sound connections to figure out (“decode”) words. While many students learn to memorize a broad range of "sight" words, they need skills to decode less-familiar words.

In this subtask, students were given a list of 50 made-up words that do not exist in the language tested but follow a typical spelling/sound combination of the language. This ensures that the student is not recognizing the whole word and must “sound-out” the non-word in order to correctly read it. The student asked to read out loud as many as they could, as quickly and carefully as they could. The EGRA administrator timed the student and recorded the number of correct words per minute (cnwpm).

Familiar Words

The familiar word reading subtask is similar in format to the nonword reading subtask except that it presents the student with a grid containing 50 words they are expected to be able to read at their grade level and have likely encountered before.

The students were instructed to read aloud as many words as they could in 1 minute. The EGRA administrator timed the student, making note of any mistakes the student made while reading the words aloud. The score is reported as correct words per minute (cwpm).

Reading Comprehension

Comprehension is the main goal of reading—understanding what is read. Comprehension is a complex task that requires some ability in all other reading skills.

This subtask is paired with the ORF subtask. Depending on how much of the ORF passage the student was able to read, the EGRA administrator asked the student up to five questions about the story. The EGRA administrator recorded the number of questions answered correctly.

Districts Included in the Study

Not part of the program
Part of the program
Map of Afghanistan

Key Findings

  • 1/3

    The percentage of Afghan students in the Herat province who were unable to read a single word of Dari text was 26% for grade 2 and 15% for grade 3.

  • 2/3

    For the Dari language, girls outperformed boys in all subtasks other than listening comprehension.

  • 3/3

    For the Pashto language, over half of Nangarhar and Laghman grade 2 students were unable to recognize a word of text.

Program Details

The student population was divided into two major population groups by type of schooling—public or Community Based Education (CBE) schools. A multi-stage sampling approach was employed for the EGRA Pashto baseline. Cluster sampling was applied to the total number of students in each relevant grade from the public schools. The cluster samples of schools in the province were proportionately allocated to the districts based on the district’s proportional representation in the total population. This allowed for appropriate representation in each of the districts in the sample and reduced skewing towards a district or set of districts. Schools were selected using a probability proportional technique in each district as per proportionate sample size. Ten students per grade per school was the sample size assessed in public schools.

See the Afghan Children Reading, Early Grade Reading Assessment Baseline, Dari & Pashto Languages, Conducted in Heart, Nangarhar & Laghman, Afghanistan Final Baseline Report (PDF, 1.5 MB) for more details.

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