CELTA vs. TESOL
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CELTA vs. TESOL
I am about to embark on this new career direction and opportunity, and I have the luxury of choice. Can anyone tell me if there is any real difference in the (domestic and overseas) marketplace between a CELTA certificate and a TESL Canada recognized TESOL certificate/diploma? I am also interested in the business English market, having worked in various businesses for years. Is either better for that? (I also have a B.A. in Communications).
Thanks in advance and apologies if this is not the appropriate forum.
Thanks in advance and apologies if this is not the appropriate forum.
Last edited by emile on Wed Jul 12, 2006 12:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: CELTA vs. TESOL
For business English either will do. In fact many business English trainers have no EFL/ESL qualifications. Just a corporate background.vanman wrote:I am also interested in the business English market, having worked in various businesses for years. Is either better for that? (I also have a B.A. in Communications).
Aren't CELTA, TESOL, TEFL, TESL all basically the same ?
Aren't CELTA, TESOL, TEFL, TESL all basically the same?
Other than different acronyms, all these courses deal with the same basic principles don't they?
Other than different acronyms, all these courses deal with the same basic principles don't they?
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Re: Aren't CELTA, TESOL, TEFL, TESL all basically the same ?
From my limited knowledge,Nexrun wrote:Aren't CELTA, TESOL, TEFL, TESL all basically the same?
Other than different acronyms, all these courses deal with the same basic principles don't they?
They do deal with the same basic principles.
However the focus can differ. And some courses are more demanding than others.
None of them will fully prepare you for teaching, but the good ones give you enough to survive comfortably while you learn to be a better/effective teacher through practice.
CELTA is focussed on adult learners, some courses also have a business English element.
CELTA is probably the most recognised globally and is a Cambridge University qualification. It is an academically acredited course.
Oxford University (I believe) do an accredited TESOL qualification, as do Universities in other countries.
CELTA and TESOL require 120-150+ hours of study, i.e. full time residentilal for 4-6 weeks, this means there is a lot of room for teaching practice in the classroom.
Having said that, some course providers are better than others.
TEFL/TESL certificates are only as good the provider or the course you do. For example there are 20 hour on-line couses with no classroom practice.
There are also 120 hour courses.
It is hard for a prospective employer to tell if you did a good course or a quickie, as such some employers do not like TEFL certs.
There are of course many language centres in the private sector that only require that you are a native speaker. They do not ask for any language teaching certs.
In the state schools it is different, they do require language teaching certificates.
The above info is, I hope, mostly correct. I hope it is helpful.