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jpadz

Star Member
Oct 19, 2008
140
4
Hi everyone,

I know that it has been asked many times before, but I never heard of anyone who tried sending IELTS-Academic to prove language proficiency yet.

So, anybody here who tried it and received a positive or negative response from CIC?

Thanks.
 
Officially, it's not good as a language proof for citizenship application.

I even think, but not 100% sure, I saw on this forum report of application with academic IELTS returned by CIC.
 
jpadz said:
Hi everyone,

I know that it has been asked many times before, but I never heard of anyone who tried sending IELTS-Academic to prove language proficiency yet.

So, anybody here who tried it and received a positive or negative response from CIC?

Thanks.

Apparently, only the IELTS general is accepted, not the IELTS academic.
 
Drea said:
Apparently, only the IELTS general is accepted, not the IELTS academic.

right. have a look (2. Language Proof if you are 18-54 years of age)

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/guides/CIT0002ETOC.asp
 
IELTS academic is completely unacceptable :o

IELTS general is accepted even if expired ! HAIL TO IELTS GENERAL WHO SAVED US ! :D
 
bongeorgeo said:
IELTS academic is completely unacceptable :o

IELTS general is accepted even if expired ! HAIL TO IELTS GENERAL WHO SAVED US ! :D

One can only be curious to know the reason, as IELTS academic much tougher than IELTS general, scoring 7 band in Academic is real challenge as compare to General, very strange unless there is a very solid reason.
 
HHH2000 said:
One can only be curious to know the reason, as IELTS academic much tougher than IELTS general, scoring 7 band in Academic is real challenge as compare to General, very strange unless there is a very solid reason.

Not only the academic is harder overall (though I know some who disagree on that), but the listening and speaking components of IELTS general and IELTS academic are identical. Same thing happens with CELPIP. Given that they only care about the listening and speaking components, it is puzzling why they insist on the General version. If there is a reason... I'd like to know it.
 
isilrion said:
Not only the academic is harder overall (though I know some who disagree on that), but the listening and speaking components of IELTS general and IELTS academic are identical. Same thing happens with CELPIP. Given that they only care about the listening and speaking components, it is puzzling why they insist on the General version. If there is a reason... I'd like to know it.

The reason is very simple , THE MONEY !
They just want money from you !

The proof that it's all about the money : If you have score 6 CLB ( placement test ) they don't accept it ! do you know why ? because it is free !
But if you have score 5 CELPIP , they accept it, why ? because it costs around $200
 
I don't know either why they don't accept academic. They went through some motions with the skilled worker program where they accepted academic for immigration purposes and then didn't, and then did, and then didn't again. Personally I find it unfair if a skilled worker applied during that period and was accepted with an academic IELTS, that he does not get it accepted for immigration while if he did the easier general training it would have been.

As for the theory that "they" just want your money, I don't buy that because IELTS and CELPIP are not owned by the Canadian govt. or by immigration so they are not getting any money from you if you take those tests. If they just wanted your money, they would develop their own test and the test fee would be a $1000 and it would expire after 3 months ;D
 
Leon said:
I don't know either why they don't accept academic. They went through some motions with the skilled worker program where they accepted academic for immigration purposes and then didn't, and then did, and then didn't again. Personally I find it unfair if a skilled worker applied during that period and was accepted with an academic IELTS, that he does not get it accepted for immigration while if he did the easier general training it would have been.

Indeed. I was in that situation. Back then, they also required IELTS to be less than one year old (when it is valid for two years).

Leon said:
As for the theory that "they" just want your money, I don't buy that because IELTS and CELPIP are not owned by the Canadian govt. or by immigration so they are not getting any money from you if you take those tests. If they just wanted your money, they would develop their own test and the test fee would be a $1000 and it would expire after 3 months ;D

Don't give them ideas!