PTE inspiration and advice

Explore our latest articles, guidance and advice to support your test journey

  • An image of a university in Australia

    Choosing an English proficiency exam for university admissions

    By PTE Author
    Reading time: 6 minutes

    Applying to university or college often involves meeting an English language requirement, which can feel high-pressure when deadlines and offers depend on a single result. The best English proficiency exam for university admissions is one that your chosen institutions formally accept and that fits your application timeline.

    Pearson Test of English (PTE) Academic is one such exam, designed and administered by Pearson to provide standardized, comparable evidence of academic English ability.

     

    How universities decide which English exams they accept

    Universities and colleges do not identify a single “best” English exam for all applicants. Instead, each institution selects a set of tests that meet its needs. It then sets minimum scores for each test that meet its language requirements. These scores are often set at program level, which means requirements may differ between undergraduate, postgraduate, foundation, or professional courses.

    Because these policies can change, you should always rely on official admissions pages rather than third-party summaries when confirming requirements.

    From a university’s perspective, an accepted test must produce results that are secure, verifiable, and comparable across applicants. This is why institutions focus on test design, scoring consistency, and reporting systems when deciding which tests to accept.

    Further reading:

     

    How test design affects how universities interpret results

    Test design matters to universities and colleges because it shapes what a score represents and how reliably results can be compared across applicants. Admissions teams need confidence that scores reflect an applicant’s ability to use English in a practical, academic context, and that they are produced under consistent and fair conditions.

    PTE Academic uses integrated tasks that assess multiple language skills together – such as reading and writing – which reflects how English is used in real-life university study. All speaking responses are recorded and assessed within the same computer-based session, rather than through a separate interview. This standardized design means institutions receive results that are easier to interpret and compare fairly.

    Further reading:

     

    Why scoring design matters for admissions decisions

    Scoring design is central to how universities interpret test results, because admissions teams need to compare applicants fairly across countries, test centers, and test dates, and be confident that their English language skills are measured consistently.

    PTE Academic uses automated scoring technology that analyzes features such as pronunciation, fluency, grammar, and vocabulary using consistent criteria. Responses that require additional checking are reviewed by trained experts to protect accuracy and test integrity. This blended approach exists to apply the same standards to every test, regardless of where or when it is taken.

    Results are reported on a scale of 10-90 (using the Global Scale of English) for overall performance and for each communicative skill. This granular level of detail allows institutions to set very precise score thresholds, mapped to the specific demands of their courses.

    Because scoring is centralized and common for every test, rather than assessed locally by an individual, results are easily comparable across all test takers.

    Further reading:

     

    How test delivery affects the application process

    Test delivery matters to universities and colleges because it determines how securely responses are captured, and how consistently the assessment is administered. PTE Academic is delivered entirely on computer at secure test centers, with all test activity conducted under the same controlled conditions.

    The full test is completed in a single session, with speaking, writing, listening, and reading all recorded digitally as part of one standardized process. There is no separate speaking appointment and no paper handling, which reduces administrative variation between test centers and test dates. Other English exams may use paper-based formats, remote delivery, or in-person interviews.

    While these approaches can work in different contexts, they can introduce additional administrative complexity or variability. For admissions teams, a single, computer-based delivery model makes it easier to verify and handle results across large pools of international applicants.

    Further reading:

     

    How results timelines affect university applications

    Application deadlines are fixed, which makes results timelines an important practical consideration. PTE Academic is designed to deliver results quickly after the test is completed, typically within 48 hours. Fast reporting allows you to confirm earlier whether you have met a university’s score requirement and to send official results without delay.

    PTE Academic supports electronic score delivery to institutions through a secure platform, which reduces administrative handling and helps admissions teams verify results efficiently. Most universities also require that English test scores are recent, often within two years of the application date. You should therefore consider both score validity periods and reporting timelines when choosing a test date.

    Further reading:

     

    How acceptance works across countries and institutions

    Acceptance depends on whether a university or authority has formally recognized a test for a specific purpose. PTE Academic is accepted by universities and colleges across major study destinations, including the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United States, and in many other institutions globally.

    It is also accepted for certain student visa pathways where proof of English proficiency is required. Acceptance can still vary by program, even within the same institution. For example, professional degrees or pathway programs may list different score requirements than general academic courses. If an admissions page lists PTE Academic with a required score, that result is treated in the same way as any other approved English test for that program.

    Further reading:

     

    What the end-to-end testing process looks like

    The testing process is designed to be standardized from registration to score reporting. You first register online, choose a test center, and complete identity and security checks. Then, on the day of the test, all tasks are completed in one sitting, with your speaking responses recorded digitally.

    After completion, your responses are scored through the centralized system, and results are released once quality checks are complete. You can then send official scores electronically to your chosen institutions, and institutions can check your score through a secure online portal. If you need to retake the test, the same standardized format and scoring process applies, which helps universities compare results fairly.

    Further reading:

     

    A short checklist before you choose an exam

    Before booking an English proficiency exam, it helps to confirm a few essentials:

    • Your chosen program lists the test as accepted and specifies a minimum score

    • Your planned test date allows time for score reporting and a retake if required

    • Your score will still be valid on the application deadline

    • You understand how official scores are sent to institutions

    Confirming these points early helps reduce last-minute risk and keeps your university application on track.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is the best English proficiency exam for university admissions?

    The best exam is the one your chosen universities or colleges accept and that fits your application timeline. Institutions focus on whether a test produces reliable, comparable results, not on ranking tests against each other.

    Is PTE Academic accepted by universities worldwide?

    PTE Academic is accepted by 4,000 universities and colleges across major study destinations. Acceptance and required scores should always be confirmed directly with each institution.

    How are PTE Academic results scored?

    Results are generated using automated scoring supported by expert human review, which applies consistent criteria across all test takers and supports comparability for admissions decisions.

    How quickly are results available?

    Results are typically available within 48 hours of test completion, which supports timely application planning.

    Can I retake the test if my score is too low?

    Yes, you may book another test date and retake the exam, provided you allow enough time before university deadlines.

  • man on laptop

    How do we keep language testing fair for everyone?

    By PTE Author
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    Fair and accessible English language testing starts with a simple promise: your score should reflect your ability, not your background or circumstances. With PTE, we ensure fair language testing by clearly defining what we assess, designing the test to include everyone from the beginning, checking for bias through statistical and quality checks, and providing accommodations so all candidates can show their skills.

    This candidate-focused approach is based on global best practices, clear validation, and ongoing monitoring. It means using simple language, fair content, strong scoring, and a process that makes things easier for test takers.

    The goal is to create a trustworthy assessment experience that helps with important life decisions in education, work, and migration, while treating every test taker with respect and fairness.

    The importance of fairness in language assessment

    Fairness in language testing means treating everyone equally, avoiding bias, offering accessible tests and making sure scores are meaningful. This ensures that results show what the test is meant to measure, not irrelevant factors like culture or disability.

    Decisions about immigration, jobs, and university placements depend on these scores, so fairness is essential.

    When tests are unfair, they can embed cultural references, specialist knowledge, or delivery barriers that put some groups at a disadvantage and reduce trust in the results.

    Recent discussions highlight problems with irrelevant content and inconsistent accommodations, emphasizing the need for clearer language and stronger checks in language testing.

    What makes a test fair:

    • Equitable content that is accessible to diverse candidates

    • Unbiased design and delivery that removes irrelevant barriers

    • Valid, reliable scoring tied to clearly defined constructs

    How Pearson PTE ensures fair assessment for all candidates

    We build fairness in from the start and verify it throughout the test’s lifecycle:

    • Diverse expert review: Test content is created and checked by diverse panels in terms of gender, language background, and region to identify sensitive issues and reduce irrelevant differences, following fairness and inclusive design guidelines.

    • Clear construct definition: This task focuses on English skills like listening, reading, speaking, and writing, so knowledge of specific topics or culture doesn't affect the results.

    • Statistical monitoring for bias: We conduct Differential Item Functioning (DIF) and related analyses to check whether items behave differently for subgroups (e.g., gender, disability, ethnicity), a core practice for ensuring fairness.

    • Transparent validation and feedback: We publish key test information, scoring guidance, and policies, and invite feedback from candidates and institutions to inform updates.

    Our language tests are designed to include everyone, avoid bias, and make sure all candidates are treated equally and can show their true abilities.

    Addressing cultural and linguistic bias in test design

    Test bias happens when content or methods unfairly favor or disadvantage certain groups because of language, culture, or experience, not because of actual skill. To prevent this, we include experts from target markets, follow sensitivity guidelines, and test items with representative samples.

    Localization is used carefully to make content clearer and more culturally relevant without changing the original English meaning, as cultural and language differences can affect test fairness.

    Accessibility and accommodations in language testing

    Accessibility in language testing makes sure all candidates, including those with disabilities, can show their skills. This is done through simple design, helpful accommodations, and easy-to-access testing methods. Using clear design, assistive technology, and standards-compliant interfaces helps fairly measure ability.

    Under many legal frameworks, candidates are entitled to reasonable testing accommodations (see our information on accommodations).

    We evaluate accessibility requirements in language testing on a case-by-case basis to ensure accommodations are appropriate and do not change the test's intent. All of our test centers adhere to local disability laws. Accessible testing benefits both universities and applicants by broadening participation and reducing.

    The role of technology in promoting fairness and inclusion

    AI and automation help deliver personalized results and detailed scoring by covering more real-world language use. However, they need careful bias checks and human oversight to ensure fairness.

    How to utilize technology fairly:

    • Define the constructs first, then select the technology that measures them accurately.

    • Build inclusive, standards-aligned interfaces and test for assistive tech compatibility.

    • Pilot with diverse users across a range of devices and bandwidths.

    • Apply bias checks to AI models and item pools and document the decisions.

    • Offer secure, flexible access at our test centers with clear privacy controls.

    • Monitor operational data and candidate feedback; iterate quickly.

    In short, making language testing fair and accessible is a complex task that needs ongoing effort, careful thinking and responsible use of technology. By maintaining high standards, including different viewpoints, and paying attention to ethics, testing organizations can build more trust and welcome more people, helping individuals and the broader education community.

    Explore our published research and find out more.

    Frequently asked questions

    How do language tests identify and reduce cultural bias?

    Language tests use diverse expert panels, sensitivity reviews, piloting, and statistical analyses like DIF to detect and remove biased content so it reflects proficiency, not background.

    How does technology impact access to language testing for all candidates?

    Technology makes access easier through online and remote tests, but programs must ensure fair device use, good internet, accessibility, and privacy to prevent new obstacles.

    Why is fairness important in high-stakes language assessments?

    A fair test makes sure your scores show your real language skills, not influenced by things like your culture, looks, accent, gender, or a disability. This also helps governments and organizations trust that your results are accurate and reliable.

    How do testing organizations monitor fairness over time?

    This will vary by company, but with PTE, we continually conduct statistical and qualitative research, publish findings, gather candidate feedback, and update content, delivery, and policies to address evolving needs.

  • man on laptop

    What strategies improve English test performance?

    By PTE Author
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    When you are taking a high-stakes English test, you want your result to reflect your real English ability. In standardized English testing, effective strategies are not shortcuts or tricks. They are ways of understanding how performance is measured and ensuring that your English can be evaluated clearly within the test design.For Pearson Test of English (PTE) Academic, the following five strategies help make sure your English is assessed clearly and accurately within the test format.

     

  • Mastering the ‘summarize group discussion’ task for PTE Academic success

    By PTE Author

    The Summarize Group Discussion task is one of the most comprehensive speaking challenges in PTE Academic. It tests your ability to listen actively, take effective notes, and deliver a coherent summary that captures multiple perspectives.

    Understanding how to approach this task strategically can significantly boost your speaking score.

  • Mastering PTE Academic: A guide to the "Respond to a Situation" task

    By PTE Author

    The "Respond to a Situation" task in the Speaking section of PTE Academic tests your ability to handle real-world university scenarios using appropriate language. This task simulates everyday campus interactions, requiring you to respond naturally and effectively to common situations you might encounter as a student.

  • [asset] Understanding your English proficiency - woman studying on laptop

    Understanding your English proficiency

    By PTE Author
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    Knowing your English level helps you pick the right course, get visas, and make strong applications for work or school. In short: proficiency levels are standard descriptions of what you can do in reading, listening, speaking, and writing.

    You can check your level with trusted online tests or official exams like PTE Academic or PTE Core, which give scores based on global standards. Below, we explain how levels are defined, how they’re tested, how to estimate your current ability, and what different goals usually need, so you can plan your next step with confidence.

    What are English proficiency levels?

    Language proficiency levels show how well you can read, listen, speak, and write. These levels follow shared standards so schools, employers, and governments around the world can easily understand your skills.

    The most common system is the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), which rates language ability from beginner (A1) to highly advanced (C2). A recent overview explains CEFR’s role as a standard for designing tests and interpreting scores across countries and programs and notes ongoing efforts to keep it up to date for modern assessments.

    Pearson’s Global Scale of English (GSE) provides a more granular 10–90 scale that also aligns to CEFR tiers. This makes it easier to see fine-grained progress and map scores to CEFR bands.

    Typical CEFR levels at a glance:

    • A1: Understand and use everyday expressions; introduce yourself; ask and answer simple questions

    • A2: Handle routine tasks; describe immediate needs and simple aspects of daily life

    • B1: Understand main points of clear standard input; produce simple connected text; manage travel or work situations

    • B2: Interact with fluency on familiar topics; write clear, detailed text; follow lectures with some support

    • C1: Use English flexibly and effectively in academic and professional contexts; understand demanding texts

    • C2: Understand virtually everything heard or read; summarize information coherently; express nuanced ideas precisely

    Common uses:

    • A1-A2: Mainly used for basic immigration visas, family reunification, entry-level work or training programs, and integration courses where simple everyday communication is sufficient.

    • B1–B2: Many vocational programs, initial professional roles, and some visa pathways

    • B2–C1: Most undergraduate admissions and professional certifications

    • C1–C2: Postgraduate study, specialized professions, and roles requiring complex communication

    How English proficiency levels are measured

    Proficiency is measured across four core skills:

    • Reading:Understanding texts, identifying main ideas and details, and interpreting vocabulary in context

    • Listening : Following speech at natural speed, recognizing key information, and inferring meaning

    • Speaking: Producing clear, organized speech; using accurate grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation

    • Writing: Composing well-structured texts suited to purpose and audience; demonstrating control of grammar and cohesion

    The scoring for most English language tests is measured against the CEFR. For The scores for PTE Academic (for studying and work) and PTE Core (for general use and migration), align to CEFR with scoring between 10 and 90. Learn more about PTE scoring alignment.

    How to assess your current English language ability

    Build a reliable picture by mixing official tests with quick checks and reflective habits:

    • Take a recognized practice test: Use an official Pearson PTE Scored Practice materials Test

      or other reputable online assessments to estimate your CEFR level and identify strengths and gaps

    • Practice with PTE-style items: Work through sample reading tasks (e.g., fill-in-the-blanks), listening summaries, and short spoken responses to simulate real test conditions.

    • Use self-analysis prompts that match the CEFR level you are aiming for: For example, ask, “Can I follow a university lecture?”, “Can I write a formal email with clear structure?”, “Can I explain a process or opinion for 60–90 seconds?”

    What English proficiency level do you need for visa applications?

    Requirements vary, but many universities, colleges, professional bodies, and visa authorities set minimum thresholds around B1–C1, or the equivalent GSE score range of 43-84 for PTE Academic and PTE Core. . Some UK family and settlement visas require A1 or A2 level. Always confirm details with the program or government authority.

    Typical requirement ranges (illustrative):

    • University / College admission:

      • Undergraduate: Often B2; competitive programs may prefer C1

      • Postgraduate: Commonly C1

    • Professional certification:

      • General professional registration: Frequently B2–C1

    • Visa/migration pathways:

      • Skilled migration: Typically B1–B2+ equivalents; some routes require higher levels depending on occupation

      • Family visas: Often A1-A2.

    For Canadian migration scenarios, explore PTE Core requirements and pathways here.

    For UK migration, consider PTE UK visa SELT tests.

    The role English proficiency in career and certification

    For many learners, English isn't just the goal; it’s the way to get degrees, licenses, and international jobs. Universities and employers look at test scores to decide who to admit or hire. Once students are in university or at work, success depends on great communication (reading, listening, speaking, and writing) skills, whether it's doing research or talking to clients.

    Research indicates that higher English proficiency supports academic performance and integration for international students, improving classroom participation and social engagement. In the workplace, clear communication underpins teamwork, safety, and advancement, making ongoing skill development a career investment, not just a test goal.

    Practical tips for improving your English proficiency

    Target all four skills with short, consistent practice:

    • Daily core routine (20–40 minutes):

      • Listening: Listen to 2–3 minutes of a podcast or lecture; note new phrases

      • Speaking: Answer one daily Q&A aloud (60–90 seconds) on familiar topics

      • Reading: Skim a news article; summarize the main idea in two sentences

      • Writing: Draft a short email or 120–150 word paragraph; focus on structure and linking words

    • Quick wins:

      • Grammar and vocabulary: Do 10 fill-in-the-blank or sentence completion items; build a personal word bank with examples

      • Reading for context: Underline signal words (however, therefore) and infer meaning of three unknown words from context

      • Listening focus: Practice identifying the overarching meaning first, then the key details and numbers

      • Feedback loop: Swap writing with a friend or use self-scoring checklists; act on one improvement point per day

    To prepare for your English exam, practice with practice tests that are similar to your actual test and check the scoring guidelines to make sure your answers meet the expectations. If you aren't sure where to start take our 'Which test is right for me?' tool. You can also read our article 'How to pick an English test that works for you'.

    Frequently asked questions
    What daily conversation questions help build speaking confidence?

    Practice short answers to everyday prompts like “What did you do today?” and “What do you like to eat?” to build fluency and reduce hesitation.

    How do I check understanding during English conversations?

    Use clarifiers such as “Could you repeat that more slowly?” or “Do you mean…?” to confirm meaning and keep the conversation clear.

    What types of excercises improve grammar and voacbulary?

    Do fill-in-the-blanks, sentence completion, and synonym/antonym matching to reinforce patterns and expand word choice.

    How should I prepare for English proficiency test formats?

    Study common task types (reading comprehension, short writing, gap-fill, brief speaking responses) and practice them under timed conditions to build accuracy and pacing. You can also try practice tests to get used to the format of a specific test, like PTE.

  • [Asset] Girl looking out over cityscape background

    Convenience matters: how to pick an English test that works for you

    By PTE Author

    When your schedule is packed and deadlines are approaching, choosing an English test that works around your life can make all the difference. You need a test that fits your timeline without creating extra admin, travel, or waiting around.

    A convenient English test isn’t just “short.” It’s a test you can book quickly, take in a way that suits your life, and get results fast while still meeting the requirements of your university, employer, or visa pathway. PTE is designed around that real-world need: fast, fair, and simple.

    Five practical questions to guide your choice

    Before you book, ask yourself:

    1. Will my score be accepted where I want to apply?

    2. How easy is it to book a test date that works for me?

    3. Can I take the test in a location that fits my life?

    4. Is the test design simple and intuitive?

    5. How long will I wait for results?

    Use these questions to compare your options and choose a test that fits your timeline, not one that forces you to change it.

  • Higher-Education-Students-in-the-UK

    New DHA visa requirements for PTE Academic

    By PTE Author
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    The Australian Department for Home Affairs (DHA) recently updated their score requirements for all accepted tests of language proficiency. The new score requirements take effect from 7 August 2025.

    What are the new score requirements? 

    From 7 August, anyone who takes the test for DHA visa purposes will need to meet updated score requirements.

    The table below shows the old and new score requirements for each score.

    We have also created a more accessible version of this table at the end of this article.

  • PTE changes 2025: everything you need to know

    By PTE Author

    We’ve made a few updates to the PTE Academic and PTE Academic UKVI tests. To make sure you’ve got the facts, we’ve created a short video that walks you through everything you need to know.

    Hosted by Jarrad, one of our product managers, this video covers what’s being updated, what’s staying the same, and how it all benefits you as a test taker.

    What’s covered in the video? 

    • The original 20 question types are still in the test.

    • We are adding two new speaking question types to give you even more chance to demonstrate your skills.  

    • Tips on how to prepare for the new speaking question types.

    • There are no changes to pricing, ID requirements, or score delivery time.

    • There are no changes to the way the test is taken (including the Speaking section).

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