If you are unsure whether you or someone else needs to take the OECT tests, please contact itas@iastate.edu.
International graduate students who fall in one of the following categories need to have their oral English language proficiency certified through OECT:
- Has been appointed or is considered for a teaching assistantship
- Will have some instructional responsibilities even if not a assigned a teaching assistantship
- Is currently applying for the Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) Program.
Exemptions:
- Students from Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and the United Kingdom whose first language is English are exempted from both OPI and TEACH.
- Students who present the following valid official scores are exempted from the OPI but are required to take the TEACH:
-
TOEFL iBT listening and* speaking scores of 23
-
IELTS listening and* speaking modules of 7
-
PTE-Academic listening and speaking scores of 85
-
- Students who present the following valid official scores are exempted from both OPI and TEACH:
- TOEFL iBT listening and* speaking scores of 24 - 30
- IELTS listening and* speaking scores of 7.5 - 9
- PTE-Academic listening and speaking scores of 86 or higher
- Duolingo English Test (DET) is NOT accepted for exemption from the OECT.
Students who qualify for a full exemption from OECT should send a copy of their TOEFL or IELTS record at itas@iastate.edu for verification. Then, they receive an official OECT certificate.
* Note: We process fall semester exemptions between July - August and spring semester exemptions between December-January.
If the TOEFL/IELTS scores expired by the time of OECT but had been filed with the university when they were still valid, students can request institutional verifcation and provide their ISU ID number.
The following criteria do NOT qualify as an exemption from OECT:
- Having completed one or more semesters of graduate work at ISU or another U.S. institution of higher education
- Having received a bachelor's or master's degree from a U.S. institution of higher education OR having been educated in a school where English was the official language
- Coming from a country where English is one of the official languages (e.g. India, Nigeria)
- Having U.S. permanent residency or citizenship.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License., 2011