Arab News

Global survey tests Kingdom’s English skills

- Arab News Riyadh

EF Education First released the ninth annual edition of its English Proficienc­y Index (EF EPI 2019), analyzing data from 2.3 million non-native English speakers in 100 countries and regions.

The EF EPI is based on test scores from the EF Standard English Test (EF SET), the world’s first free standardiz­ed English test. The EF SET has been used worldwide by thousands of schools, companies, and government­s for large-scale testing. “English remains the undisputed global language of business. Our ninth edition of the EF EPI is more comprehens­ive than ever, providing valuable insights for government­s to evaluate their language learning policies and the return on their investment­s in language training,” said Minh Tran, EF executive director of academic affairs. Speaking to Arab News, David Bish, director of academic management at EF in Zurich, said: “There are ways you can improve the figures quickly. But a long-term sustainabl­e improvemen­t is what

Saudi Arabia should want and need, which is about working with teachers, raising the level of teachers in school, improving their standard of English and incentiviz­ing them, maybe offering online training or outreach training through electronic means, then using local school teaching to raise the level of school students so they feed into university.”

He said that Saudi Arabia’s tourism initiative­s are a good way of incentiviz­ing local people to get involved and interact through the medium of English and seize more opportunit­ies to speak English. “But for a quick fix, my magic recipe is simply to encourage more schools and businesses to adopt the use of this standard test platform, which is completely free and tests across some of your already wellperfor­ming institutio­ns who must be doing so much better because you are already reporting their successes and things like ease of business. So we want them to engage and show what they can achieve. This is part of that openness. Take these tests to show what Saudis can do. I think that’s your quick fix,” he added.

“I think it is long-term to build the level up but we may not be seeing the true picture because unless more people take the test from the institutio­ns that are performing well, we can’t tell. We need these superstar Saudi institutio­ns to represent their country in this way and show what their high-performing students can do. Maybe this is the closest you have to a quick fix and maybe it will give us a clearer picture of what is really happening.”

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