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karg_g wrote:Hi,
I still think if your university/college is part of PBS points calculator you should be fine. See below the first few lines nails our concern.
1) http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... hip/kol-uk
Page 3, Para 2: "Degrees taught in English
Those who have obtained a degree taught in English will not be required to show a formal
speaking and listening qualification.
Those with an academic qualification (not a professional or vocational qualification) who provide
appropriate evidence that the qualification was taught or researched in English are considered
automatically to meet the English language component of the KoLL requirement and will not be
required to show a formal speaking and listening qualification. The qualification must be deemed
by UK NARIC to meet the recognised standard of a Bachelor’s or Master’s degree or PhD in the
UK. However, they will still be required to pass the Life in the UK test to demonstrate their
knowledge of life in the UK."
Good Luck
so, degrees from Asian universities as i understand are not at C1 level, they will return back stating that the degree does not meet C1 CEFR; which cannot demonstrate that the degree was taught in englishLevel Of English: Description whether it meets C1 CEFR or not
I went for this some months ago and got letter similar in wordings what Guru said.t_india wrote:Have we seen some samples of it, where it has been stated like this?D4109125 wrote:The English Language assessment should read something on the lines of:
....although we can confirm the degree was taught in English we cannot confirm this meets a C1 level.
fslateef,fslateef wrote:I went for this some months ago and got letter similar in wordings what Guru said.t_india wrote:Have we seen some samples of it, where it has been stated like this?D4109125 wrote:The English Language assessment should read something on the lines of:
....although we can confirm the degree was taught in English we cannot confirm this meets a C1 level.
I can look for letter and post its wordings if needed.
Thanks
I did call the UKBA 2 times today just get their opinion on this. They have said that the statement of comparability is mandatory for this. I have said them that the guidelines doesn't ask for any proof from UK NARIC it just only states that the qualification needs to be deemed. UKBA customer service said that they will not get to know if your degree is deemed by UK NARIC Unless you have a letter from them and as well one of the customer service said that they are not using PBS for settlement category to check if the qualification is deemed by UK NARIC. Hope this helps !!!BalajiSundaram wrote:Following this link
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
v) the applicant has obtained an academic qualification (not a professional
or vocational qualification) which is deemed by UK NARIC to meet
the recognised standard of a Bachelor's or Master's degree or PhD in
the UK, and provides the specified evidence to show:
(1) he has the qualification, and
(2) that the qualification was taught or researched in English;
The above contents says that your degree should be deemed by UK NARIC and they have not mentioned that you need to get a certificate from them. As I heard the PBS calculator database was fed from the UK NARIC database. so if effectively your degree is available in PBS, then it will be available in the UK NARIC. The points 1 and 2 are the enough evidences to provide and they have never mentioned a proof from NARIC is a must..!!!
correct me if im wrong. Thanks
okokok wrote:Sorry, guys, I'm still a little bit confused:
1) I am on Tier-2 General (2009 + 2012). When applying for entry clearance I have provided to NARIC a letter from my Uni (non-English speaking, in general) that my PhD was written in English. This was okay then, and I have claimed successfully 10 points on PBS. After 3 years, when applying for another Tier-2 visa I ticked the box “language qualification has been proven already” (or something of this kind). Does it mean that my qualification will continue to be automatically recognised for ILR purpose? I glanced over the application form and I cannot see such a subsection present. I bet many of us are in quite a similar situation. Do I have to contact NARIC one more time asking them to confirm something which has been actually confirmed by them 5 years ago?
2) Sorry for not asking this in a separate thread: if an ILR application is refused is the applicant entitled to remain until her previous (current) visa expires, or the rejection implies cancelation of current visa too? Many thanks, and sorry for probably being repetitive.
Yes this is as per the statement of intent. However there is no option in the new application form, to indicate, this has already been proved as part of entry clearance or extensionlandsend wrote:I get same situation with you. Please see following document from UKBA says: "We will accept a range of English language qualifications as evidence that an applicant has met the requirement to hold a B1 level speaking and listening qualification. This will help ensure that all those needing to take a test will be able to find one suitable for their needs and, so far as possible, that no one who already has an English language qualification at B1 or above will be required to take another one. So, for example, a person applying for settlement as a Tier 2 (General) migrant who has already demonstrated a knowledge of English equivalent to B1 level in order to qualify for entry clearance, will not have to take a further test at settlement stage."
It looks that we do not have to provide qualification, however does anybody make sure about it?
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... t-koll.pdf
okokok wrote:Sorry, guys, I'm still a little bit confused:
1) I am on Tier-2 General (2009 + 2012). When applying for entry clearance I have provided to NARIC a letter from my Uni (non-English speaking, in general) that my PhD was written in English. This was okay then, and I have claimed successfully 10 points on PBS. After 3 years, when applying for another Tier-2 visa I ticked the box “language qualification has been proven already” (or something of this kind). Does it mean that my qualification will continue to be automatically recognised for ILR purpose? I glanced over the application form and I cannot see such a subsection present. I bet many of us are in quite a similar situation. Do I have to contact NARIC one more time asking them to confirm something which has been actually confirmed by them 5 years ago?
2) Sorry for not asking this in a separate thread: if an ILR application is refused is the applicant entitled to remain until her previous (current) visa expires, or the rejection implies cancelation of current visa too? Many thanks, and sorry for probably being repetitive.
at least tell us that your degree was from uk university or from overseas university.tier1check wrote:I applied for ILR today at Croydon and it was success. I will post full details in couple of days but for English lang this is what I gave
1. main applicant
- bachelor degree certificate
- NARIC comparability letter
- Letter from university mentioning medium of instruction
2. dependent applicant
- bachelor degree certificate
- NARIC comparability letter
- Transcript mentioning medium of instruction
Hope this helps