Malta Independent

English language students increase by 1.6%

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Last year, foreign students attending English language courses at local specialise­d schools numbered 76,730, equivalent to an increase of 1.6 per cent over 2015, according to data released by the National Statistics Office (NSO).

Teaching English as a Foreign Language: 2016

The majority of students attending English language courses in Malta came from Italy (24.5%), Germany (14.2%) and France (11.1%). Together, these accounted for 49.8% of total students.

The largest share of language students were aged 15 years or less, accounting for 31.3% of total students. Students aged 50 and over were in the minority and numbered 5,071. Female students outnumbere­d males, and accounted for 60.4% of the entire student population.

July was the busiest month for English language specialise­d schools with 19,334 arrivals, or 25.2% of the annual total. This was followed by August and June with 12.9% and 11.0% of total arrivals respective­ly. A similar pattern was also recorded in 2015.

The most popular course offered by specialise­d English language schools was General English. This course alone accounted for 53,304 students (69.5%) attending during 2016. This was followed by the Intensive English course, with 17.2% of total students.

The share of foreign students attending English language courses in 2016 when compared to total inbound tourists for the same year, stood at 3.9%. This share ranged from 3.0% to 4.8% among males and females respective­ly.

Foreign students enrolled in specialise­d schools for English language spent a total of 229,005 weeks in Malta. The average length of stay during the year under review stood at 3.0 weeks, down by 0.2 weeks when compared to 2015.

Students from Colombia recorded the highest average duration with an average of 13.5 weeks per student. These were followed by South Korean and Turkish students with an average duration of 10.2 and 6.2 weeks per student respective­ly.

In 2016, teaching staff in English language specialise­d schools numbered 1,221. The largest share of teaching staff (36.3%) were aged between 18 and 24. Female teaching personnel made up for 72.1% of the total teaching staff. Non-teaching staff amounted to 799, of which 61.3% were employed on a full-time basis.

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