All ESOL Skills for Life qualifications are based on the ESOL Core Curriculum and are accredited by Ofqual.
What can ESB do for your students?
1. External Assessment
All assessments are examined externally by ESB leaving you free to teach
Reading and writing papers are marked and moderated by ESB markers
Speaking and listening learners receive a personal written report
​2. Quick Turnaround
Dates for the assessments are chosen by you so you can organise assessment dates around your timetable
Speaking and listening assessments can be booked up to 4 weeks before the assessment date and Reading and Writing assessments can be booked up to 2 days before the assessment date, so you can enter your learners when they are ready
Results will be issued five working days after the assessment date or, in the case of Reading and Writing, five days after receipt of papers to the office
Hundreds of schools, colleges, training centres, universities and prisons deliver ESB qualifications throughout the year. We want to highlight the incredible work our centres do by putting them ‘In the Spotlight’ on our website.
The centre we are going to feature this month is the Brushstrokes Community project in Smethwick. Jane Alsop, Brushstrokes ESOL Coordinator and Work Club Facilitator told us about the invaluable work that the centre does.
Brushstrokes is a partnership project between Father Hudson’s Care, Infant Jesus Sisters and the Parish of St Philip Neri. Based in a parish centre in Smethwick we first opened our doors in 2000 with the aim of seeking out and helping the hidden poor in the area.
Initially engaging with asylum seekers, the people coming to Brushstrokes have increased in number and diversity; over the past 15 years we have welcomed people from over 100 countries. We provide practical resources to destitute and homeless people and those living in extreme poverty, including food, baby products, clothing and other essential items.
ESOL classes are another big part of what we do. Since government funding cuts to FE, which has seen ESOL provision be reduced drastically, we have seen a huge increase in numbers coming to Brushstrokes to learn English. Over the past four years we have averaged 150 students a year. Since September 2015 we have already had 179 learners. As ESOL Coordinator, I manage a team of committed and experienced volunteer teachers without whom we simply could not meet the need of so many. The largest percentage of learners are at Pre-Entry level with many people unable to read and write in their own language. We have a nucleus of learners who stay with us and progress through the levels and others, mainly asylum seekers, who stay a short time before getting leave to remain and relocating.
Since the classes began eight mums have taken ESB exams at Pre-Entry and Entry 1. As children go to nursery, mums move into other classes and new mums take their place. Two students are now working towards their Entry 2 exams at the end of this year.
Through ESB ESOL exams, which we began in 2013, many students have achieved in learning for the first time in their lives. For someone who has never been to school, receiving a certificate for learning is an enormous achievement. Initially some students, having never done an exam before were very scared but the ESB assessors are encouraging and friendly and students always come out smiling. When you hear laughter coming from the exam room you know your students will be relaxed and able to do their best. We are part funded by the Big Lottery and one of our outcomes is 50 exam achievements per year – ESB have made that target a positive experience for our students and volunteer teachers.
The most rewarding aspect of teaching ESOL at Brushstrokes is seeing people gain confidence in their ability to communicate. Student comments include ‘now I can go to the doctor on my own,’ and ‘now I can talk to my children’s teachers’. We have seen students go on to college, to university, find employment and become integrated and confident members of their community. An ESOL teacher is so much more than just a teacher.