Kiwi children's reading levels have dropped to their lowest level on record - and this time it is well-off Pākehā students who have plunged the most.
The latest Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (Pirls), the first since the creation of national standards in 2010, shows that New Zealand has slipped 10 places from 22nd out of 41 countries in 2011 to 32nd out of 50 last year.
Australia, Austria, Lithuania, Slovenia and Spain have all overtaken New Zealand, and five new countries with children reading above NZ levels have come into the survey for the first time.
Education Minister Chris Hipkins says the findings show the previous government's fixation on National Standards was misplaced and justifies them being axed by the incoming coalition.
An Auckland teacher warns of a decline in new entrants' oral language skills and blames falling reading skills on parents spending too much time on smartphones instead of reading to their kids.
The Pirls international median reading level, fixed at an index of 500 when the surveys started in 2001, has increased with each survey to 530 in 2011 and 539 last year.
New Zealand's score was static in the first three surveys at between 529 and 532, just above the global median. But it has now slipped below the median for the first time, to 523.
And although lower-income, Māori and Pacific children are still reading at levels well below the average for Pākehā children, this year Pākehā reading has slid most steeply, down 13 points to an average score of 545.
Māori children's reading level also fell by 9 points to 479, but the average for Pacific children jumped by 12 points to 485.
Children in the highest socio-economic group also dropped much more sharply (down 13 points) than children in the middle group (down 3 points) or the poorest group (down 5 points).
A teacher at decile-7 Three Kings School in Auckland, Jane Martin, said there was a noticeable decline in oral language in children starting school at 5.
"Parents are not talking to kids like they used to," she said.
"You have parents sitting in silence on their cellphones, and the children all have phones at a younger age, so they are not so engaged in conversation. You have time-poor parents perhaps not reading to their children at night."
The Pirls tests aim to measure children's reading in the fourth year of schooling, but they also set a minimum age of 9.5, so the 5600 Kiwi kids who were tested were in Year 5.
Girls scored 21 points better than boys in New Zealand, and 19 points better than boys globally. The decline in New Zealand was almost identical for both sexes.
New Zealand has an unusually wide spread of achievement between its strongest and weakest readers, and historically the best Kiwi kids were up with the best in the world.
"In Pirls 2016 this changed, and while there is still a notable percentage of children who achieved the high benchmark (41 per cent), the percentage that reached each benchmark has reduced since 2011."
The survey found that NZ parents are still more likely than the global average to say they "often" read books, tell stories, sing, talk and play word games with their children, and are more likely to have books in the home.
Teachers report that NZ children have more access to computers for school reading lessons than in any other country, and the children themselves say they have an above-average sense of "belonging" at school.
However, one clue to our falling achievement is that once again a global survey has found Kiwi kids far more likely to be bullied. The Kiwis were the third-most-likely, after South Africa and Bahrain, to say other kids made fun of them, hit or hurt them, stole from them, spread lies or embarrassing stuff about them or made them do things against their will.
Kiwi kids are also the third most likely in the world to say they feel tired almost every day (43 per cent), and the 13th most likely to say they feel hungry almost every day (33 per cent).
By teachers' reports, NZ kids are also second-most-likely to be always or almost always streamed into ability groups for reading (43 per cent).
Massey University literacy expert Professor Tom Nicholson noted that England's reading performance had increased in every year since 2006, when it started teaching phonics - teaching how letters sound so that children can "decode" new words.
He said most NZ teachers still used a "whole language" approach, encouraging children to work out a new word from its context.
Education Minister Chris Hipkins said national standards clearly hadn't made the difference the former Government wanted, and he was now focused on improving teacher quality.
National education spokeswoman Nikki Kaye said National's "social investment" approach was only just getting under way, and she still believed schools should use data to target extra help to those most in need.