Trial Testing of Redesigned Naturalization Test for Naturalization Applications, 76634-76637 [2022-27178]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 240 / Thursday, December 15, 2022 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services
[Document Identifier 0930–0092]
[CIS No. 2723–22; DHS Docket No. USCIS–
2022–0011]
Agency Information Collection
Request; 60-Day Public Comment
Request; Correction
Trial Testing of Redesigned
Naturalization Test for Naturalization
Applications
U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
ACTION: Notice of trial testing of
redesigned naturalization test.
AGENCY:
Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration,
Department of Health and Human
Services.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice; correction.
The Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration
published a correction document in the
Federal Register on December 7, 2022
concerning request for comments on
Confidentiality of Substance Use
Disorder Patient Records published
November 22, 2022. The November 22,
2022 publication only listed the
Department of Health and Human
Services in the headings and contained
an incorrect Document Identifier and
contact for further information or
submission of public comments. The
December 7, 2022 document corrected
those errors but contained an incorrect
contact email address. This document
corrects the contact email address.
Comments on the information collect
request must be received on or before
January 23, 2023.
SUMMARY:
In the
Federal Register of November 22, 2022,
at 87 FR 71341, in FR Doc. 2022–25343,
the following corrections are made:
1. On page 71341, in the second
column, correct the ADDRESSES and FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT captions
to read:
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments to
Carlos.Graham@samhsa.hhs.gov or by
calling (240) 276–0361.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
When submitting comments or
requesting information, please include
the document identifier 0930–0092, and
project title for reference, to Carlos
Graham, Reports Clearance Officer;
email: Carlos.Graham@samhsa.hhs.gov,
or call (240) 276–0361.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Carlos Graham,
Reports Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2022–27224 Filed 12–14–22; 8:45 am]
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This notice announces that
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS) will conduct a
nationwide trial of planned changes to
the naturalization test. The
naturalization test is comprised of the
civics test that evaluates a knowledge
and understanding of the fundamentals
of U.S. history and of the principles and
form of U.S. government, as well as tests
that evaluate an individual’s
understanding of the English language.
USCIS will conduct a trial of both a
standardized English-speaking test as
part of the requirement to demonstrate
an understanding of the English
language and a civics test with updated
content and format. The trial testing
does not include the reading or writing
portions of the test. USCIS will conduct
the trial with volunteer communitybased organizations (CBOs) that work
with immigrant English language
learners and lawful permanent residents
(LPRs) preparing for naturalization.
Participating in the trial is completely
voluntary for organizations and
students, and any test taken during, or
as part of, the trial will not affect any
naturalization application that may be
submitted to USCIS during the trial
testing period. USCIS may use the
results to support changes to the
naturalization test which USCIS would
also announce through a different
Federal Register notice.
DATES: USCIS will conduct an initial
virtual engagement to introduce the trial
testing on January 12, 2023. USCIS will
announce additional national
engagements on the USCIS Citizenship
Resource Center available at https://
www.uscis.gov/citizenship. During these
engagements, USCIS invites all
interested parties to submit written data,
views, comments, and arguments on all
aspects of this trial testing. Comments
may also be submitted to
natzredesign22@uscis.dhs.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Flores, Office of Citizenship, U.S.
SUMMARY:
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Citizenship and Immigration Services,
DHS, 5900 Capital Gateway Drive, Camp
Springs, MD 20746; telephone 240–721–
1940 (this is not a toll-free number) or
email natzredesign22@uscis.dhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Under section 312(a)(1) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (‘‘the
Act’’), 8 U.S.C. 1423(a)(1), most
applicants seeking to naturalize must
demonstrate an understanding of the
English language including an ability to
speak, read, and write words in ordinary
usage (English language requirements).
Additionally, under section 312(a)(2) of
the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1423(a)(2), most
applicants seeking to naturalize must
demonstrate a knowledge and
understanding of the fundamentals of
U.S. history and of the principles and
form of government in the United States
(civics requirements). Under 8 CFR
312.1(c) and 312.2(c), an applicant for
naturalization may satisfy these
requirements by passing an examination
(naturalization test). Certain applicants
may be exempt from the English
language requirements and civics
requirements if they either meet specific
age and time as LPR thresholds, or if
they cannot comply with the English
language requirements or the civics
requirements, or both, because of a
physical or developmental disability or
mental impairment. See section 312 of
the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1422.
In 1997, the U.S. Commission on
Immigration Reform (the Commission)
recommended that the former
Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) 1 standardize the naturalization
testing process. The Commission
recommended that the naturalization
tests be revised to better determine if
applicants have a meaningful
knowledge of U.S. history and
government and can communicate in
English. Also in 1997, the Department of
Justice (DOJ) began to reengineer the
naturalization process. For
naturalization testing, DOJ determined
that the former INS should develop a
uniform approach to testing, including
standard and meaningful test content,
standardized testing instruments and
protocols, standard scoring, and
standard levels of passing. The former
INS began to redesign the testing
process with a goal of developing a new
process that would be uniform, fair, and
meaningful. On December 26, 2000,
1 On March 1, 2003, INS transferred from the
Department of Justice (DOJ) to the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), pursuant to the
Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–296).
INS’ adjudication functions involving
naturalization and citizenship transferred to USCIS.
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 240 / Thursday, December 15, 2022 / Notices
former INS issued ‘‘Policy
Memorandum No. 73: Standardization
of Procedures for Testing Naturalization
Applicants on English and Civics’’ to
guide the testing procedures for the
English and civics components of the
naturalization test and to announce
plans to redesign the test.2
In 2003, USCIS began redesigning the
current naturalization test, which was
fully implemented in October 2009 and
is the test currently administered to all
naturalization applicants. See Current
Testing Procedures below for
description. At the time, USCIS
standardized only the reading, writing,
and civics tests. The English-speaking
test was not standardized.3
On November 13, 2020, USCIS
announced 4 a revised civics test.5 This
revised test required applicants to
answer 12 out of 20 questions correctly
(60%) in order to pass and had a bank
of 125 questions from which to study.
USCIS maintained the statutorily
established special considerations for
applicants who are 65 years old or older
and have at least 20 years of lawful
permanent resident status. These
applicants were required to answer six
out of ten questions correctly to pass. In
February 2021, in response to the
public’s comments on the 2020 revised
civics test and in keeping with the
Executive Order on Restoring Faith in
Our Legal Immigration Systems and
Strengthening Integration and Inclusion
Efforts for New Americans,6 USCIS
announced that it would revert to the
previous 2008 version of the test.7
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Current Testing Procedures
Currently, the speaking test is
determined by the applicant’s answers
to questions typically asked by an
officer during the naturalization
eligibility interview. The questions
2 For a copy of the 2000 memo please see docket
USCIS–2022–0011 on regulations.gov.
3 USCIS worked to revise the speaking test as part
of this initiative, but ultimately decided not to
implement it for several reasons, including the
anticipated cost to provide more translation
services for naturalization interviews.
4 See USCIS Announces a Revised Naturalization
Civics Test (November 13, 2020), available at
https://www.uscis.gov/news/news-releases/uscisannounces-a-revised-naturalization-civics-test.
5 See also USCIS Memorandum, L. Francis
Cissna, Revision of the Naturalization Civics Test
(May 3, 2019), available at https://www.uscis.gov/
sites/default/files/document/memos/Revision_of_
the_Naturalization_Civics_Test_D1_Signed_5-319.pdf.
6 See Executive Order 14012 (February 2, 2021),
available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/
FR-2021-02-05/pdf/2021-02563.pdf.
7 See Policy Alert, Revising Guidance on
Naturalization Civics Education Requirements
(February 22, 2021), available at https://
www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/policymanual-updates/20210222-CivicsTest.pdf.
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asked are taken from the Form N–400,
Application for Naturalization (Form N–
400). During the interview, the officer
reviews the applicant’s responses to the
questions in the Form N–400 for
accuracy. The applicant may respond
with simple words or phrases.8
There is also an overarching test to
evaluate an applicant’s ability to
understand the English language. If the
applicant understands and responds to
questions, directions, or prompts during
the naturalization interview, then the
applicant demonstrates the ability to
understand English. USCIS officers are
required to repeat and rephrase
questions until they are satisfied that
the applicant either fully understands
the question or does not understand
English. The applicant is not required to
provide a definition of a word or phrase
found in Form N–400 to establish
understanding of the English language.9
USCIS also evaluates a naturalization
applicant’s ability to understand the
English language, specifically the ability
to read and write words in ordinary
usage in the English language, through
a standardized test in which the
applicant must read and write,
respectively, one out of three items
correctly to demonstrate the ability. An
applicant passes the reading test if the
applicant reads aloud one of the three
sentences without extended pauses in a
way that the applicant can convey the
meaning of the sentence and the officer
can understand the sentence. The
applicant passes the writing test if the
applicant can convey the meaning of
one of the three sentences to the officer.
The applicant can establish the ability
to write even if the writing sample
contains some grammatical, spelling, or
capitalization errors; omitted short
words that do not interfere with
meaning; or numbers spelled out or
written as digits.
An applicant for naturalization who is
required to take the civics test must
answer six of the ten civics questions
correctly to pass the test. A USCIS
system randomly selects the test
questions, and an officer administers the
test orally. The officer stops the test
when the applicant correctly answers
the minimum number of questions
required to pass the test. Applicants
pass the civics test when they provide
8 See USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 12,
Citizenship and Naturalization, Part E, English and
Civics Testing and Exceptions, Chapter 2, English
and Civics Testing [12 USCIS–PM E.2], available at
https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-12part-e-chapter-2.
9 See Scoring Guidelines for the U.S.
Naturalization Test available at https://
www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/guides/
Test_Scoring_Guidelines.pdf (last updated
December 14, 2021).
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a correct answer or provide an
alternative phrasing of the correct
answer for six of the ten questions from
a test bank of 100 items.
Revising the Tests and Testing
Procedures
USCIS is developing the trial test for
the naturalization test redesign in
response to feedback that USCIS
received from stakeholders about the
standardization and structure of the
naturalization test. USCIS is conducting
the trial as part of its effort to redesign
the naturalization test to better ensure
that the English-speaking part of the
English Language requirements is
standardized and sufficiently tests the
ability to understand words in ordinary
usage in the English language. Further,
during the trial testing, USCIS would be
assessing the understanding of English
through the questions or prompts given
with the speaking test instead of using
the interview questions and Form N–
400. However, in the trial testing, USCIS
would not assess the understanding of
English as part of the reading and
writing portions of the naturalization
test.
USCIS is not conducting a trial on the
current English reading and writing
tests because these tests are already
standardized and USCIS believes they
sufficiently test the ability to read and
write words in ordinary usage in the
English language, respectively.
Furthermore, USCIS is conducting the
trial to update the civics test content to
reflect current best practices in test
design and to redesign the civics test
into a multiple-choice format. Once
internal and external subject matter
experts collect, evaluate, and consider
all the information from the trial, USCIS
will finalize a redesigned test and notify
the public through a subsequent Federal
Register Notice.
Naturalization Test Redesign Initiative
USCIS expects the Naturalization Test
Redesign Initiative to take
approximately two years and be ready
for implementation by late 2024. The
trial test period is expected to run for a
five-month period in 2023. An integral
part of the Naturalization Test Redesign
Initiative is trial testing because it
allows USCIS to determine the
suitability of the new test content and
use data to refine test content.
Before the trial test, USCIS will
develop a bank of speaking and civics
test items. USCIS expects to announce
the call for contract bids to facilitate a
Technical Advisory Group (TAG) by
early 2023. The TAG will be comprised
of external subject matter experts from
the field of language acquisition, U.S.
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history and civics, and test development
who will assist with the redesign
initiative by reviewing trial test data and
making recommendations as part of the
process for finalizing the bank of
speaking and civics test items. TAG
members may make various
recommendations about the tests to
include language level and content.
USCIS will make final determinations of
which test items will be included in the
final test bank.
After the trial test period, the TAG
will review the data and provide
recommendations on suitability of items
and a review of educational materials
for the new test. USCIS will use the
recommendations and trial test data to
develop the final test item banks which
USCIS would announce through a
Federal Register Notice.
Trial Testing
USCIS will conduct the trial with
volunteer CBOs nationwide that work
with adult English language learners
and LPRs preparing for naturalization.
Students at these organizations will be
taking classes in English as a second
language (ESL) or preparing for the
naturalization test, or both. Volunteer
CBOs must be nonprofits conducting
ESL or citizenship education classes at
the time of the trial. Adult students
enrolled in classes may choose to
participate or withdraw from the trial at
any time.
Participating in the civics trial test
and the speaking trial test is completely
voluntary for organizations and
students. The trial test is not part of an
applicant’s naturalization application.
Therefore, tests taken during, or as part
of, the trial test will not count as or
against any of the two chances to pass
the naturalization tests for any
naturalization application that may be
submitted to USCIS. Applicants who
file Form N–400 will continue to take
the current naturalization test and not
the trial test.
Students will answer questions from
three sections during the trial:
Demographic Information, Speaking
Test Items, and Civics Test Items.
Volunteer adult students will answer
the following four demographic
questions with the help of their
instructor:
• National Reporting System (NRS)
ESL Level;
• Country of Origin;
• Primary Language Spoken at Home;
• Location; and
• Age Range.
USCIS will not collect personally
identifiable information and will use the
demographic information only for
analysis.
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Trial Speaking Test
As part of the speaking test trial,
volunteer students will look at three
color photographs, which they will be
asked to describe. USCIS will continue
to provide reasonable accommodations
for applicants with disabilities.
Applicants will respond to three color
photographs randomly selected from a
bank of approximately 70 images that
directly correspond to an ordinary usage
scenario, such as daily activities, the
weather, or food. The bank of images
will be developed by selecting
photographs that clearly depict a
scenario.
The content areas for the types of
photographs that would be used during
the speaking test have been derived
from topics and situations an English
language learner may encounter in
everyday life. These content areas can
be commonly found in adult ESL
textbooks and adult language
assessments.10 These content areas are
subject to change during the trial. After
the trial, the image bank will be refined
to a bank of approximately 40 images for
implementation. Applicants will be
scored on the ability to respond in
English using vocabulary and simple
phrases that are relevant to the image.
Trial Civics Test
During the trial, students will answer
ten multiple-choice civics questions and
select the one best answer from the four
choices presented. USCIS decided to
trial test multiple choice test questions
to be consistent with the industry
standard and best practice and increase
standardization of test questions. Much
of the trial civics content will be
familiar to adult citizenship students
and will be similar to the current civics
test content. The trial test will also
contain new test items based on a
design framework that includes an
external review by subject matter
experts in the field of test
development.11 Applicants will read
civics test items that will be displayed
on a tablet and choose the one best
response from the potential answers
displayed.
Volunteer Community-Based
Organization Selection
In 2023, USCIS will ask CBOs to
contact the Office of Citizenship (OoC)
10 For example of content on ESL assessments, see
ETS TOEIC https://www.ets.org/s/toeic/pdf/
examinee-handbook-for-toeic-listening-reading-testupdated.pdf and Center for Applied Linguistics
Best Plus 2.0 https://www.cal.org/adultspeak/
BPslideshow/bestplus.html.
11 USCIS is developing a statement of work to
contract with external subject matter experts to
form a Technical Advisory Group (TAG).
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if they wish to participate in the trial
testing. CBOs must be active in
providing ESL or citizenship classes, or
both, during the trial testing and be
designated as a nonprofit under Internal
Revenue Code section 501(c)(3).
Instructors at the volunteer CBOs
must be willing to incorporate USCISprovided educational handouts on the
trial test items in their curricula and
attend virtual trainings and webinars on
the trial protocols. Instructors at CBOs
will ask their students to volunteer in
the trial. Students must be enrolled in
an ESL or citizenship class at the time
of the trial. Students may choose to
participate or not participate in the trial
at any time.
USCIS will seek approximately 1,500
individuals who are enrolled in adult
education classes as the sample size for
the trial test consistent with the
standard practices in the field of English
as a second language (ESL) testing.12
The trial test is tentatively scheduled to
take place during a five-month period in
2023. USCIS will announce the request
for volunteer CBOs on the USCIS
Citizenship Resource Center available at
https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship in the
months preceding the trial test period.
CBOs who are interested in volunteering
for the trial test may request more
information by emailing
natzredesign22@uscis.dhs.gov.
Public Engagement
In advance of obtaining volunteers for
the trial testing, USCIS will also
conduct national engagements for
interested CBOs. National engagements
will be announced on the USCIS
Citizenship Resource Center available at
https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship.
These engagements will include a
review of each step taken in the process
and progress of each step.
The first engagement to introduce the
trial testing will be held virtually on
January 12, 2023. Further, throughout
the trial testing and redesign period,
USCIS will conduct several in-person
engagements in conjunction with
scheduled adult citizenship education
trainings and virtual stakeholder
engagements every quarter.13
12 American Educational Research Association,
American Psychological Association, & The
National Council on Measurement in Education.
Standards for Educational and Psychological
Testing. (Washington, DC: American Educational
Research Association, 2014), pp 44–45 (Standards
3.8 & 3.9). See https://www.testingstandards.net/
uploads/7/6/6/4/76643089/standards_
2014edition.pdf.
13 See USCIS Upcoming Teacher Trainings
available at https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship/
resources-for-educational-programs/register-fortraining.
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During these engagements, USCIS
invites all interested parties to submit
written data, views, comments, and
arguments on all aspects of this trial
testing. Comments may also be
submitted to natzredesign22@
uscis.dhs.gov. Comments must be
submitted in English, or an English
translation must be provided.
Ur M. Jaddou,
Director, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, Department of Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2022–27178 Filed 12–14–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–97–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[DOCKET NO. 6367–N–01]
Preview of the FY 2022 Family
Unification Program; Notice of Funding
Opportunity
Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Through this notice, HUD is
announcing the publication of a preview
of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 Family
Unification Program (FUP) Notice of
Funding Opportunity (NOFO) in
advance of publication on Grants.gov.
HUD is making this preview available to
allow interested applicants to review
the preview of the NOFO, submit
questions, and prepare applications.
HUD intends to publish the NOFO and
allow submission of applications in
March of 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ryan E. Jones, Director, Housing
Voucher Management and Operations
Division, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20410–8000; telephone
number 202–402–2677 (this is not a tollfree number); email 2022FUPNOFO@
hud.gov. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech or communication disabilities.
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit:
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: HUD is
publishing a preview of the FY 2022
FUP NOFO to give interested applicants
time to prepare their applications prior
to the opening of the application period.
HUD expects that this preview will be
available for approximately 90 days
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SUMMARY:
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before HUD publishes the official NOFO
on Grants.gov and begins to take
applications. During this preview, the
FY 2022 FUP NOFO preview is
available on HUD’s website at the
following URL: https://www.hud.gov/
grants.
This NOFO preview is subject to
change. While HUD does not intend to
make substantive changes at this point,
applicants should consider the NOFO
published on Grants.gov to be the
official version.
HUD will not accept applications
during the preview period. However,
during this preview, interested
applicants may submit questions on the
NOFO preview to the following email
address: 2022FUPNOFO@hud.gov (see
Sections VII and VIII.3. of the NOFO
preview). Interested applicants may also
conduct the required registration
activities for the System for Award
Management (SAM), Unique Entity
Identifier (UEI), and Grants.gov (see
Section IV.C. of the NOFO preview).
HUD strongly encourages interested
applicants to begin working with their
partnering public child welfare agency
(PCWA) and Continuum of Care (CoC)
to draft their Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) during the
preview period. Please note that while
interested applicants may work on their
MOUs during the preview period, the
NOFO requires that the MOU must be
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HUD anticipates that the FY 2022
FUP NOFO will be published on
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publication of the FY 2022 FUP NOFO
on Grants.gov will signal the opening of
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period will be open for 30 days.
Applications must be submitted through
Grants.gov.
HUD will not accept requests for a
waiver of electronic submission
requirements during the preview period.
Such requests may only be submitted
once the NOFO has been published on
Grants.gov (see Section IV.A. of the
NOFO preview).
Dominique Blom,
General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public
and Indian Housing.
[FR Doc. 2022–27109 Filed 12–14–22; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–7056–N–45; OMB Control
No. 2502–0016]
60-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Final Endorsement of
Credit Instrument
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Housing—Federal Housing
Commissioner, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
HUD is seeking approval from
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for the information collection
described below. In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD is
requesting comment from all interested
parties on the proposed collection of
information. The purpose of this notice
is to allow for 60 days of public
comment.
SUMMARY:
Comments Due Date: February
13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
Colette Pollard, Reports Management
Officer, REE, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Room 4176, Washington, DC
20410–5000; telephone 202–402–3400
(this is not a toll-free number) or email
at Colette.Pollard@hud.gov for a copy of
the proposed forms or other available
information. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech and communication disabilities.
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Colette Pollard, Reports Management
Officer, REE, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Washington, DC 20410; email
Colette Pollard at Colette.Pollard@
hud.gov or telephone 202–402–3400.
This is not a toll-free number. HUD
welcomes and is prepared to receive
calls from individuals who are deaf or
hard of hearing, as well as individuals
with speech and communication
disabilities. To learn more about how to
make an accessible telephone call,
please visit https://www.fcc.gov/
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Copies of available documents
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DATES:
E:\FR\FM\15DEN1.SGM
15DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 240 (Thursday, December 15, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76634-76637]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-27178]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
[CIS No. 2723-22; DHS Docket No. USCIS-2022-0011]
Trial Testing of Redesigned Naturalization Test for
Naturalization Applications
AGENCY: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
ACTION: Notice of trial testing of redesigned naturalization test.
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SUMMARY: This notice announces that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS) will conduct a nationwide trial of planned changes to
the naturalization test. The naturalization test is comprised of the
civics test that evaluates a knowledge and understanding of the
fundamentals of U.S. history and of the principles and form of U.S.
government, as well as tests that evaluate an individual's
understanding of the English language. USCIS will conduct a trial of
both a standardized English-speaking test as part of the requirement to
demonstrate an understanding of the English language and a civics test
with updated content and format. The trial testing does not include the
reading or writing portions of the test. USCIS will conduct the trial
with volunteer community-based organizations (CBOs) that work with
immigrant English language learners and lawful permanent residents
(LPRs) preparing for naturalization. Participating in the trial is
completely voluntary for organizations and students, and any test taken
during, or as part of, the trial will not affect any naturalization
application that may be submitted to USCIS during the trial testing
period. USCIS may use the results to support changes to the
naturalization test which USCIS would also announce through a different
Federal Register notice.
DATES: USCIS will conduct an initial virtual engagement to introduce
the trial testing on January 12, 2023. USCIS will announce additional
national engagements on the USCIS Citizenship Resource Center available
at https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship. During these engagements, USCIS
invites all interested parties to submit written data, views, comments,
and arguments on all aspects of this trial testing. Comments may also
be submitted to [email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary Flores, Office of Citizenship,
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, DHS, 5900 Capital Gateway
Drive, Camp Springs, MD 20746; telephone 240-721-1940 (this is not a
toll-free number) or email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Under section 312(a)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act
(``the Act''), 8 U.S.C. 1423(a)(1), most applicants seeking to
naturalize must demonstrate an understanding of the English language
including an ability to speak, read, and write words in ordinary usage
(English language requirements). Additionally, under section 312(a)(2)
of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1423(a)(2), most applicants seeking to naturalize
must demonstrate a knowledge and understanding of the fundamentals of
U.S. history and of the principles and form of government in the United
States (civics requirements). Under 8 CFR 312.1(c) and 312.2(c), an
applicant for naturalization may satisfy these requirements by passing
an examination (naturalization test). Certain applicants may be exempt
from the English language requirements and civics requirements if they
either meet specific age and time as LPR thresholds, or if they cannot
comply with the English language requirements or the civics
requirements, or both, because of a physical or developmental
disability or mental impairment. See section 312 of the Act, 8 U.S.C.
1422.
In 1997, the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform (the Commission)
recommended that the former Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) \1\ standardize the naturalization testing process. The
Commission recommended that the naturalization tests be revised to
better determine if applicants have a meaningful knowledge of U.S.
history and government and can communicate in English. Also in 1997,
the Department of Justice (DOJ) began to reengineer the naturalization
process. For naturalization testing, DOJ determined that the former INS
should develop a uniform approach to testing, including standard and
meaningful test content, standardized testing instruments and
protocols, standard scoring, and standard levels of passing. The former
INS began to redesign the testing process with a goal of developing a
new process that would be uniform, fair, and meaningful. On December
26, 2000,
[[Page 76635]]
former INS issued ``Policy Memorandum No. 73: Standardization of
Procedures for Testing Naturalization Applicants on English and
Civics'' to guide the testing procedures for the English and civics
components of the naturalization test and to announce plans to redesign
the test.\2\
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\1\ On March 1, 2003, INS transferred from the Department of
Justice (DOJ) to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), pursuant
to the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107-296). INS'
adjudication functions involving naturalization and citizenship
transferred to USCIS.
\2\ For a copy of the 2000 memo please see docket USCIS-2022-
0011 on regulations.gov.
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In 2003, USCIS began redesigning the current naturalization test,
which was fully implemented in October 2009 and is the test currently
administered to all naturalization applicants. See Current Testing
Procedures below for description. At the time, USCIS standardized only
the reading, writing, and civics tests. The English-speaking test was
not standardized.\3\
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\3\ USCIS worked to revise the speaking test as part of this
initiative, but ultimately decided not to implement it for several
reasons, including the anticipated cost to provide more translation
services for naturalization interviews.
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On November 13, 2020, USCIS announced \4\ a revised civics test.\5\
This revised test required applicants to answer 12 out of 20 questions
correctly (60%) in order to pass and had a bank of 125 questions from
which to study. USCIS maintained the statutorily established special
considerations for applicants who are 65 years old or older and have at
least 20 years of lawful permanent resident status. These applicants
were required to answer six out of ten questions correctly to pass. In
February 2021, in response to the public's comments on the 2020 revised
civics test and in keeping with the Executive Order on Restoring Faith
in Our Legal Immigration Systems and Strengthening Integration and
Inclusion Efforts for New Americans,\6\ USCIS announced that it would
revert to the previous 2008 version of the test.\7\
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\4\ See USCIS Announces a Revised Naturalization Civics Test
(November 13, 2020), available at https://www.uscis.gov/news/news-releases/uscis-announces-a-revised-naturalization-civics-test.
\5\ See also USCIS Memorandum, L. Francis Cissna, Revision of
the Naturalization Civics Test (May 3, 2019), available at https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/memos/Revision_of_the_Naturalization_Civics_Test_D1_Signed_5-3-19.pdf.
\6\ See Executive Order 14012 (February 2, 2021), available at
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-02-05/pdf/2021-02563.pdf.
\7\ See Policy Alert, Revising Guidance on Naturalization Civics
Education Requirements (February 22, 2021), available at https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/policy-manual-updates/20210222-CivicsTest.pdf.
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Current Testing Procedures
Currently, the speaking test is determined by the applicant's
answers to questions typically asked by an officer during the
naturalization eligibility interview. The questions asked are taken
from the Form N-400, Application for Naturalization (Form N-400).
During the interview, the officer reviews the applicant's responses to
the questions in the Form N-400 for accuracy. The applicant may respond
with simple words or phrases.\8\
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\8\ See USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 12, Citizenship and
Naturalization, Part E, English and Civics Testing and Exceptions,
Chapter 2, English and Civics Testing [12 USCIS-PM E.2], available
at https://www.uscis.gov/policy-manual/volume-12-part-e-chapter-2.
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There is also an overarching test to evaluate an applicant's
ability to understand the English language. If the applicant
understands and responds to questions, directions, or prompts during
the naturalization interview, then the applicant demonstrates the
ability to understand English. USCIS officers are required to repeat
and rephrase questions until they are satisfied that the applicant
either fully understands the question or does not understand English.
The applicant is not required to provide a definition of a word or
phrase found in Form N-400 to establish understanding of the English
language.\9\
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\9\ See Scoring Guidelines for the U.S. Naturalization Test
available at https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/guides/Test_Scoring_Guidelines.pdf (last updated December 14, 2021).
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USCIS also evaluates a naturalization applicant's ability to
understand the English language, specifically the ability to read and
write words in ordinary usage in the English language, through a
standardized test in which the applicant must read and write,
respectively, one out of three items correctly to demonstrate the
ability. An applicant passes the reading test if the applicant reads
aloud one of the three sentences without extended pauses in a way that
the applicant can convey the meaning of the sentence and the officer
can understand the sentence. The applicant passes the writing test if
the applicant can convey the meaning of one of the three sentences to
the officer. The applicant can establish the ability to write even if
the writing sample contains some grammatical, spelling, or
capitalization errors; omitted short words that do not interfere with
meaning; or numbers spelled out or written as digits.
An applicant for naturalization who is required to take the civics
test must answer six of the ten civics questions correctly to pass the
test. A USCIS system randomly selects the test questions, and an
officer administers the test orally. The officer stops the test when
the applicant correctly answers the minimum number of questions
required to pass the test. Applicants pass the civics test when they
provide a correct answer or provide an alternative phrasing of the
correct answer for six of the ten questions from a test bank of 100
items.
Revising the Tests and Testing Procedures
USCIS is developing the trial test for the naturalization test
redesign in response to feedback that USCIS received from stakeholders
about the standardization and structure of the naturalization test.
USCIS is conducting the trial as part of its effort to redesign the
naturalization test to better ensure that the English-speaking part of
the English Language requirements is standardized and sufficiently
tests the ability to understand words in ordinary usage in the English
language. Further, during the trial testing, USCIS would be assessing
the understanding of English through the questions or prompts given
with the speaking test instead of using the interview questions and
Form N-400. However, in the trial testing, USCIS would not assess the
understanding of English as part of the reading and writing portions of
the naturalization test.
USCIS is not conducting a trial on the current English reading and
writing tests because these tests are already standardized and USCIS
believes they sufficiently test the ability to read and write words in
ordinary usage in the English language, respectively. Furthermore,
USCIS is conducting the trial to update the civics test content to
reflect current best practices in test design and to redesign the
civics test into a multiple-choice format. Once internal and external
subject matter experts collect, evaluate, and consider all the
information from the trial, USCIS will finalize a redesigned test and
notify the public through a subsequent Federal Register Notice.
Naturalization Test Redesign Initiative
USCIS expects the Naturalization Test Redesign Initiative to take
approximately two years and be ready for implementation by late 2024.
The trial test period is expected to run for a five-month period in
2023. An integral part of the Naturalization Test Redesign Initiative
is trial testing because it allows USCIS to determine the suitability
of the new test content and use data to refine test content.
Before the trial test, USCIS will develop a bank of speaking and
civics test items. USCIS expects to announce the call for contract bids
to facilitate a Technical Advisory Group (TAG) by early 2023. The TAG
will be comprised of external subject matter experts from the field of
language acquisition, U.S.
[[Page 76636]]
history and civics, and test development who will assist with the
redesign initiative by reviewing trial test data and making
recommendations as part of the process for finalizing the bank of
speaking and civics test items. TAG members may make various
recommendations about the tests to include language level and content.
USCIS will make final determinations of which test items will be
included in the final test bank.
After the trial test period, the TAG will review the data and
provide recommendations on suitability of items and a review of
educational materials for the new test. USCIS will use the
recommendations and trial test data to develop the final test item
banks which USCIS would announce through a Federal Register Notice.
Trial Testing
USCIS will conduct the trial with volunteer CBOs nationwide that
work with adult English language learners and LPRs preparing for
naturalization. Students at these organizations will be taking classes
in English as a second language (ESL) or preparing for the
naturalization test, or both. Volunteer CBOs must be nonprofits
conducting ESL or citizenship education classes at the time of the
trial. Adult students enrolled in classes may choose to participate or
withdraw from the trial at any time.
Participating in the civics trial test and the speaking trial test
is completely voluntary for organizations and students. The trial test
is not part of an applicant's naturalization application. Therefore,
tests taken during, or as part of, the trial test will not count as or
against any of the two chances to pass the naturalization tests for any
naturalization application that may be submitted to USCIS. Applicants
who file Form N-400 will continue to take the current naturalization
test and not the trial test.
Students will answer questions from three sections during the
trial: Demographic Information, Speaking Test Items, and Civics Test
Items. Volunteer adult students will answer the following four
demographic questions with the help of their instructor:
National Reporting System (NRS) ESL Level;
Country of Origin;
Primary Language Spoken at Home;
Location; and
Age Range.
USCIS will not collect personally identifiable information and will
use the demographic information only for analysis.
Trial Speaking Test
As part of the speaking test trial, volunteer students will look at
three color photographs, which they will be asked to describe. USCIS
will continue to provide reasonable accommodations for applicants with
disabilities. Applicants will respond to three color photographs
randomly selected from a bank of approximately 70 images that directly
correspond to an ordinary usage scenario, such as daily activities, the
weather, or food. The bank of images will be developed by selecting
photographs that clearly depict a scenario.
The content areas for the types of photographs that would be used
during the speaking test have been derived from topics and situations
an English language learner may encounter in everyday life. These
content areas can be commonly found in adult ESL textbooks and adult
language assessments.\10\ These content areas are subject to change
during the trial. After the trial, the image bank will be refined to a
bank of approximately 40 images for implementation. Applicants will be
scored on the ability to respond in English using vocabulary and simple
phrases that are relevant to the image.
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\10\ For example of content on ESL assessments, see ETS TOEIC
https://www.ets.org/s/toeic/pdf/examinee-handbook-for-toeic-listening-reading-test-updated.pdf and Center for Applied
Linguistics Best Plus 2.0 https://www.cal.org/adultspeak/BPslideshow/bestplus.html.
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Trial Civics Test
During the trial, students will answer ten multiple-choice civics
questions and select the one best answer from the four choices
presented. USCIS decided to trial test multiple choice test questions
to be consistent with the industry standard and best practice and
increase standardization of test questions. Much of the trial civics
content will be familiar to adult citizenship students and will be
similar to the current civics test content. The trial test will also
contain new test items based on a design framework that includes an
external review by subject matter experts in the field of test
development.\11\ Applicants will read civics test items that will be
displayed on a tablet and choose the one best response from the
potential answers displayed.
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\11\ USCIS is developing a statement of work to contract with
external subject matter experts to form a Technical Advisory Group
(TAG).
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Volunteer Community-Based Organization Selection
In 2023, USCIS will ask CBOs to contact the Office of Citizenship
(OoC) if they wish to participate in the trial testing. CBOs must be
active in providing ESL or citizenship classes, or both, during the
trial testing and be designated as a nonprofit under Internal Revenue
Code section 501(c)(3).
Instructors at the volunteer CBOs must be willing to incorporate
USCIS-provided educational handouts on the trial test items in their
curricula and attend virtual trainings and webinars on the trial
protocols. Instructors at CBOs will ask their students to volunteer in
the trial. Students must be enrolled in an ESL or citizenship class at
the time of the trial. Students may choose to participate or not
participate in the trial at any time.
USCIS will seek approximately 1,500 individuals who are enrolled in
adult education classes as the sample size for the trial test
consistent with the standard practices in the field of English as a
second language (ESL) testing.\12\ The trial test is tentatively
scheduled to take place during a five-month period in 2023. USCIS will
announce the request for volunteer CBOs on the USCIS Citizenship
Resource Center available at https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship in the
months preceding the trial test period. CBOs who are interested in
volunteering for the trial test may request more information by
emailing [email protected].
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\12\ American Educational Research Association, American
Psychological Association, & The National Council on Measurement in
Education. Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing.
(Washington, DC: American Educational Research Association, 2014),
pp 44-45 (Standards 3.8 & 3.9). See https://www.testingstandards.net/uploads/7/6/6/4/76643089/standards_2014edition.pdf.
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Public Engagement
In advance of obtaining volunteers for the trial testing, USCIS
will also conduct national engagements for interested CBOs. National
engagements will be announced on the USCIS Citizenship Resource Center
available at https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship. These engagements will
include a review of each step taken in the process and progress of each
step.
The first engagement to introduce the trial testing will be held
virtually on January 12, 2023. Further, throughout the trial testing
and redesign period, USCIS will conduct several in-person engagements
in conjunction with scheduled adult citizenship education trainings and
virtual stakeholder engagements every quarter.\13\
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\13\ See USCIS Upcoming Teacher Trainings available at https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship/resources-for-educational-programs/register-for-training.
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[[Page 76637]]
During these engagements, USCIS invites all interested parties to
submit written data, views, comments, and arguments on all aspects of
this trial testing. Comments may also be submitted to
[email protected]. Comments must be submitted in English, or
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an English translation must be provided.
Ur M. Jaddou,
Director, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2022-27178 Filed 12-14-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111-97-P