The English ability of Taiwan's university students is not good enough and they should be forced to study the language throughout their four years at college, academics said yesterday.
"The average TOEFL score among 3,000 sample students was 496," said Yu Min-ning (
"As the students did not know the purpose of the test in advance, they took it without preparing. Therefore, 496 is a realistic representation of the English proficiency among these university students," Yu said.
Yu was responsible for the statistical analysis of the survey.
TOEFL is an English proficiency test for non-native speakers. The test includes three sections: reading comprehension, grammar and listening comprehension.
According to information released by the Educational Testing Service (ETS), the organization that designs TOEFL, a score of between 410 and 489 indicates that the test taker's listening and reading comprehension skills are satisfactory but that writing ability is insufficient to attend academic courses in English.
ETS conducted TOEFL in 20 universities in Taiwan from Sept. 1 to Sept. 30 this year. The 20 universities included nine graduate schools, nine national universities, four private universities, two national technical colleges and three private technical colleges.
"Of the students, 32.2 percent scored below 410, a score equivalent to intermediate-level English level; 8.8 percent of the students scored below 350, which is equivalent to beginner level," said Chen Chao-ming (
According to Chen, a desirable score for a first-year college student would be 500 or higher.
"A score of 500 means that a student has an English vocabulary of 6,000 to 7,000 words," Chen said.
The academics came up with a number of ways to improve the English ability of Taiwanese students.
"The expectation of English proficiency among Taiwanese students needs to be a realistic one. Having a realistic expectation enables educators and students to reach their goals more easily," said Chen Ying-huei (
According to Chen Ying-huei, college-level English courses do not necessarily have to be taught by professors who have a Ph.D.
"If practical English is the aim of these courses, the classes should be taught by well-trained English-language teachers, not by professors who specialize in language or literature research," Chen Ying-huei said.
Chen Ying-huei also suggested students be forced to study English beyond the first year of university.
"English education should be made compulsory throughout all four years in college. Furthermore, a comprehensive program should be designed according to the needs of each academic level," Chen Ying-huei said.
Chen Fu-yan (
"It is essential that educational data warehouses be established over time, as such data can be used as a basis of education programs in Taiwan, as well as to make comparisons with educational achievements in other countries," Chen Fu-yan said.
Chen Chao-ming suggested that university-level English education should be standardized, either by individual universities or by the Ministry of Education.
"Currently, nobody knows what the standard books or teaching materials are," Chen Chao-ming said.
Chen said that the integration of English for specific purposes, English for academic purposes and instruction in English are necessary for a successful college-level education.
"There should be ways to measure how good a student's English is before graduating from college, as this measurement guides students and recruiting corporations in their hiring process," said Chen Fu-yan.
China might accelerate its strategic actions toward Taiwan, the South China Sea and across the first island chain, after the US officially entered a military conflict with Iran, as Beijing would perceive Washington as incapable of fighting a two-front war, a military expert said yesterday. The US’ ongoing conflict with Iran is not merely an act of retaliation or a “delaying tactic,” but a strategic military campaign aimed at dismantling Tehran’s nuclear capabilities and reshaping the regional order in the Middle East, said National Defense University distinguished adjunct lecturer Holmes Liao (廖宏祥), former McDonnell Douglas Aerospace representative in Taiwan. If
ECHOVIRUS 11: The rate of enterovirus infections in northern Taiwan increased last week, with a four-year-old girl developing acute flaccid paralysis, the CDC said Two imported cases of chikungunya fever were reported last week, raising the total this year to 13 cases — the most for the same period in 18 years, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said yesterday. The two cases were a Taiwanese and a foreign national who both arrived from Indonesia, CDC Epidemic Intelligence Center Deputy Director Lee Chia-lin (李佳琳) said. The 13 cases reported this year are the most for the same period since chikungunya was added to the list of notifiable communicable diseases in October 2007, she said, adding that all the cases this year were imported, including 11 from
Prosecutors in New Taipei City yesterday indicted 31 individuals affiliated with the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) for allegedly forging thousands of signatures in recall campaigns targeting three Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmakers. The indictments stem from investigations launched earlier this year after DPP lawmakers Su Chiao-hui (蘇巧慧) and Lee Kuen-cheng (李坤城) filed criminal complaints accusing campaign organizers of submitting false signatures in recall petitions against them. According to the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office, a total of 2,566 forged recall proposal forms in the initial proposer petition were found during the probe. Among those
The Ma-anshan Nuclear Power Plant’s license has expired and it cannot simply be restarted, the Executive Yuan said today, ahead of national debates on the nuclear power referendum. The No. 2 reactor at the Ma-anshan Nuclear Power Plant in Pingtung County was disconnected from the nation’s power grid and completely shut down on May 17, the day its license expired. The government would prioritize people’s safety and conduct necessary evaluations and checks if there is a need to extend the service life of the reactor, Executive Yuan spokeswoman Michelle Lee (李慧芝) told a news conference. Lee said that the referendum would read: “Do