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ESL Add-On
Licensure
The ESL section of
the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at North Carolina
State University was a recipient of a U.S. Department of Education Title VII Grant from 2001 - 2007.
The ESL section has also been awarded an E-Learning Grant from the
Distance-Education Office at N.C. State.
The NC State ESL
add-on licensure program reflects the new standards for ESL language
teachers approved by the NC Board of Education on October 3, 2002.
The ESL Licensure
Program is offered both via distance education and on-campus
for those who wish to take advantage of a more traditional classroom
format. It is intended for currently employed North Carolina teachers holding a current initial or
continuing license in another field.
Provisional or Temporary/Emergency status in the primary area will not be considered. The ESL license will add on to the teacher's current teaching license at
the level of initial licensure (undergraduate or graduate).
The distance
education option is unique among approved licensure programs. It offers
teachers the ability to complete licensure course work via videotape or Internet. This will help teachers who do not live close to
licensure programs to complete the requirements for ESL licensure
without traveling to campus.
The program
requires 15 units of course work.
A grade of
C or better is required in all of the professional ESL add-on
licensure courses.
Candidates must maintain a C average in each of the five courses to
remain in the NCSU ESL licensure program.
Licensure applicants must have studied the equivalent of at least two semesters of college-level foreign
language and must have received a
grade of "C" or higher.
Non-native speakers of English must achieve a score of 250 on the
Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) and a score of 55 on the Test
of Spoken English (TSE) or its institutional equivalent, the SPEAK test,
as entrance requirements into the program.
Application
Deadlines:
November 1
for spring admission
May 1
for fall admission
Prospective
applicants are encouraged to apply early, as spaces in the program are
limited and fill quickly.
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