What are the Canadian Language Benchmarks? The Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB) are the national standard used in Canada for describing, measuring and recognizing the English language proficiency of adult immigrants and prospective immigrants for living and working in Canada. The Centre for Canadian Language Benchmarks (CCLB) promotes and supports the recognition and use of the CLB as a practical, fair and reliable national standard of second language proficiency in educational, training, community and workplace settings. The CLB provide a descriptive scale of communicative proficiency in English as a Second Language, expressed as benchmarks or reference points. They cover four skill areas: reading, writing, speaking and listening, and use real life language tasks to measure language skills. The CLB provide a framework of reference for learning, teaching, programming and assessing adult English as a Second Language in Canada, a national standard for planning second language curricula for a variety of contexts, and a common "yardstick" for assessing the outcomes. The Canadian Language Benchmarks 2000 are available in two documents:
See the statement prepared by the Quality Review and Appropriate Use Committee of the CCLB Board about "Appropriate Uses of the Canadian Language Benchmarks Guidelines and Assessment Tools" by clicking here CLB - Appropriate Uses. Companion Documents to the Canadian Language Benchmarks 2000: The following 4 documents provide a more in-depth study and support for the CLB 2000:
For further information about the French counterpart to the CLB, les Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens, please click here. |