ESOL Teacher Training Qualifications

NATECLA recommends that everyone teaching English to speakers of other languages should be trained as a specialist teacher of ESOL. 

Different rules apply in each of the countries and jurisdictions where NATECLA operates, although even where you’re not required (by law, or by your employer) to have an ESOL teaching qualification it’s always a good idea to have, or work towards, one.

Depending on where you’re working as an ESOL teacher, you might also need a general teaching qualification and/or be required to register with a professional body or teaching council (see details below).

Not all ESOL provision involves accreditation (and sometimes ESOL learners will be working towards qualifications designed for first-language English speakers), although in all ESOL settings it’s important for teachers to have a solid understanding of what’s involved in supporting learners to improve their English. 

Courses and qualifications

If you are interested in teaching ESOL, or are already doing so and would like to take a training course leading to a teaching qualification, there are several different routes you can take: 

Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland

The training requirements are slightly different in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, but similar types of course are available.

  • The gold standard initial qualification to work in ESOL in Scotland is a CELTA or Trinity Cert TESOL.

  • SQA (The Scottish Qualifications Authority) does have a suite of Teacher Training Qualifications leading to a PDA Applied Practitioner Studies in TESOL SCQF level 10

  • Introduction to tutoring ESOL - this is for classroom assistants or volunteers

  • Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) 

  • Applied Practitioner Studies in TESOL

  • There is one specialist course: Teaching ESOL Literacies to Adults (TELtA) - you need to be qualified and have teaching experience for this.