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gordon wrote:Oh boy. Whoever decided that the CEFR was the way to go with this, is going to have the mother of migraines by the end of it. For years, researchers at Cambridge ESOL haven't been able to decide quite how levels like C1 (proposed for tier 1 candidates) precisely compare to IELTS scores; earlier research put that somewhere between 6 and 7, for overall IELTS scores, while later research presented by IELTS put it squarely at 6.5. A sly way of raising the bar, perhaps ? It bears an uncanny (and uncomfortable) resemblance to that nursery game 'Pin the tail on the donkey'; I have this absurd image of Liam Byrne spinning himself round in his office ...
AG
This is common that a university raise its expectation and thus to raise the university profile. That is the reason why it is written normally not a must. We need to see reality in the ground.and a high level of ability in English (i.e. 8 in IELTS is a normal requirement for admission, and individual scores of at least 7.5 must be achieved in reading and 8.0 in writing. The TOEFL test is not normally accepted).
gordon wrote: There's at least one department at Oxford that requires an IELTS score of 8: Oriental studies.
AG
alina76 wrote:Hi ,
I have IELTS band score 8 (overall).
reading: 6
writing: 8
speaking:9
Listening: 8
english is not my first language. Its not that hard to get IELTS band 8.
pantaiema wrote:Dear Alina
Thank U for you information abut IELTS.
- Which country did U do your education from elementary to university?
- Would U please explain in which country have U been living in working?
- How long have U been living in English speaking country.
I am quite confusing here. It is very uncommon that people have their individual Band difference in 3.0 points (speaking and reading). Normally, a person ability in reading, writing, speaking and listening is developed in integral way. Have anyone witnessed that someone IELTS individual band different in 3.0 points? I have not seen any. I know that extreme case is not impossible and could exist.
If this happen that someone reading and speaking ability different in 3.0 points, what kind of English test IELTS is?
alina76 wrote:Hi ,
I have IELTS band score 8 (overall).
reading: 6
writing: 8
speaking:9
Listening: 8
english is not my first language. Its not that hard to get IELTS band 8.
alina76 wrote:Ielts is not all about english in a way its bit technical. In reading section you have to read different paragraphs and then you have to remember things to answer the questions.
I was always very low in reading section when even trying previous IELTS papers.
And offcourse I dont need to give anyone any evidence that I have band 8, which is definitely is not out of this world. It wasn't that hard at all.
By the way I am from pakistan.
gordon wrote: I don't know what level would be optimal, but my own experience tells me that IELTS 6 is far too low to be useful.
AG
gordon wrote:Oh boy. Whoever decided that the CEFR was the way to go with this, is going to have the mother of migraines by the end of it. For years, researchers at Cambridge ESOL haven't been able to decide quite how levels like C1 (proposed for tier 1 candidates) precisely compare to IELTS scores; earlier research put that somewhere between 6 and 7, for overall IELTS scores, while later research presented by IELTS put it squarely at 6.5. A sly way of raising the bar, perhaps ? It bears an uncanny (and uncomfortable) resemblance to that nursery game 'Pin the tail on the donkey'; I have this absurd image of Liam Byrne spinning himself round in his office ...
AG
pantaiema wrote:Do you the average IELTS for foreign student who study in the UK? I believe it is just about 6.0. They could finish their study successfully and with comparable result with their British counterparts.
[...]
The British universities will loose revenue from foreign Non EU students which are 3-4 times higher than british students.
If universities in the UK insist IELTS on 7.0 you will not see so many Chinese students at British universities. FYI there are thousands of Chinese students study in the UK, majority of them (if not almost all) do not get IELTS of 7.0. (I know atleast two British business school in the UK take around 500 Chinese students for each intake). But these chinese students succesfully finish their study with comparable result with their British counterparts. Is not this fact have already spoken itselves ?
gordon wrote:You might want to look at a paper that came out a while back about IELTS scores: http://ehlt.flinders.edu.au/education/i ... /paper.pdf : the arguments are no less relevant for their coming from Australia, and offer a compelling counter-argument. In relation to HSMP/tier 1:
(1) The fact that many Chinese students finish university in the UK cannot be taken as full evidence that a low IELTS threshold is sufficient. The research shows that English-language proficiency is but one of a number of meaningful determinants for outcomes at university. That said, however, the research also showed that students with higher IELTS scores performed systematically better than those with lower scores. So if IELTS scores are meant to be used as a partial predictor of performance for those on the job market, then only accepting higher IELTS scores for HSMP/tier 1 is not unreasonable, in the pursuit of high-level performers.
(2) The paper from Australia also noted the adverse impact on revenues that would come about by raising language requirements, as you did. That obviously is something that UK universities (on the revenue side) as well as the HO (on number of tier 1 applicants) must consider. My post discussed higher language requirements in the context of functionality in the workplace, an issue that employers had raised in the consultation, and one that I had experienced personally. That's linked to the Government's problem of raising requirements to improve the calibre of applicants (quality), but separate from the challenge to avoid shutting out otherwise desirable qualified applicants (quantity), a trade-off which I did not discuss.
I don't dispute that the quantity is a serious issue, but I am unconvinced by your implicit argument that the issue of the quantity should override the issue of applicants' quality. To my mind, that was why a compromise was necessary somewhere between IELTS 6 (where it is now, and in my view too low) and IELTS 8 (which was proposed in Feb 2005, and which I agree would probably be too high).
AGpantaiema wrote:Do you the average IELTS for foreign student who study in the UK? I believe it is just about 6.0. They could finish their study successfully and with comparable result with their British counterparts.
[...]
The British universities will loose revenue from foreign Non EU students which are 3-4 times higher than british students.
If universities in the UK insist IELTS on 7.0 you will not see so many Chinese students at British universities. FYI there are thousands of Chinese students study in the UK, majority of them (if not almost all) do not get IELTS of 7.0. (I know atleast two British business school in the UK take around 500 Chinese students for each intake). But these chinese students succesfully finish their study with comparable result with their British counterparts. Is not this fact have already spoken itselves ?
hsmp2010 wrote:is this possible that in new system there will be proof for letter from university