Global Scale of English 大使

英語學習的領先者

 

GSE 大使 Credly 徽章

我們細心挑選的專家正為大家塑造英語學習的未來

Global Scale of English 大使是全球英語規模 (GSE) 的忠實擁護者,他們相信 GSE 能夠激勵學習者、使其快速進步並建立他們對英語的信心。

我們的 GSE 大使為教師、作家、研究人員和學者,擁有豐富的英語教學(ELT)經驗。他們積極在社交平台上分享、主持網路研討會、於網絡上發表文章,並在本地和國際英語活動中演講。我們很榮幸能與他們合作,向世界各地的語言學習群組介紹 GSE 及其優勢。

了解我們的 GSE 大使

Nicolas Chaparro
Itje Chodidjah
Renata Condi
Leonor Corradi
Zarela Cruz
Sara Davila
Belgin Elmas
Billie Jago
Silvia Minardi
Maria Jesus Moreno
Hebatallah Morsy
卢卡斯·帕库拉
Maria Quinonez
Dr Le Dinh Bao Quoc
Nelly Segura
Natalia Wong

您是 English 语言学习的领导者吗?

与我们合作,成为 GSE 大使,以提高 GSE 以及您作为 ELT 专家的形象。 

作为 GSE 大使,您将有机会:
  • 代表 Pearson 参加会议: 作为 GSE的冠军,在本地和国际会议上登台。
  • 提高社交媒体上的参与度: 通过在社交媒体平台上分享见解、成功案例和宝贵资源,扩大 GSE 的影响力。
  • 为出版物贡献专业知识: 通过我们 Pearson Languages 网站上共同发布的文章分享您对 ELT 的专业知识和观点。
  • 参与 GSE 案例研究: 合作开展真实案例研究,以展示 GSE 在全球范围内的实际应用和有效性。
作为回报,您将:
  • 加入独家全球社区: 与来自世界各地的精选 ELT 领导者合作、分享见解和建立联系。
  • 获得 GSE 大使认证: 通过 Pearson 的官方认证,您的专业知识和奉献精神获得认可。
  • 提高您作为 ELT 领导者的知名度: 在 GSE 大使网页上提供个人资料,并在我们的社交平台上进行推广。
  • 访问独家培训课程: 通过量身定制的专业培训课程,始终走在 ELT 创新的最前沿,以提高您的技能和专业知识。
Mike Mayor

GSE大使计划背后的驱动力

浏览我们的最新出版物

  • Two business women talking together at a computer
    Measuring the ROI of Business English (Part 1): How the GSE and KPIs drive real impact
    By Łukasz Pakuła
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    An L&D manager opens a slide deck and says, “Seventy people are on Business English this quarter. The feedback is positive. Here are a few quotes.” A finance manager nods, then asks the only question that really matters when budgets are tight:

    “What measurable change has this brought about in the business?”

    If that scene feels familiar, you’re not alone.

    It’s almost cliché to say that English is no longer a nice-to-have in business. Across sectors, it’s a standard requirement across sectors. Leaders are demanding results, and employees who increasingly value the confidence that English brings, as Pearson’s 2024 report clearly shows. And yet, many organizations still treat language training as a recurring calendar entry rather than a strategic lever. Classes happen, materials circulate, learners attend. Business as usual.

    Then the inevitable question arrives: Is this actually working?

    The question “What’s our ROI (Return on Investment) on Business English courses?” echoes across the boardroom table. Out come the attendance charts, school-issued progress reports, maybe a few glowing comments. Useful? The Germans would say jein, yes and no (and of course they have a word for that).

    The case for measuring what matters

    If the above sounds familiar, or if I’ve simply managed to grab your attention, keep reading. Over this short two-part series, I’ll show how to build a measurement philosophy for language training using KPIs, explain why independent assessment via the Global Scale of English (GSE) is your best ally, and illustrate how all these datapoints come together in the only metric every boardroom finds attractive: ROI.

    I’ll also show how the Pearson English International Certificate (PEIC) ticks that final box of recognition and reward. Although this post is primarily aimed at business stakeholders, I invite everyone in the EFL world to see how the GSE can serve as a business tool, alongside its methodological prowess.

    KPIs: small, steady, and meaningful

    In learning and development, measurement works best when it’s little and often. KPIs shouldn’t be an autopsy at the end of a course; they should be pulse checks along the way, data you can act on.

    Short feedback loops after sessions, mid-course benchmarks, quick manager observations on behavioural change - these aren’t just admin exercises. They’re your early-warning and early-celebration system rolled into one.

    I like to think of KPIs as chapters in a coherent story. Each chapter answers a different question, and together they tell a narrative that HR, L&D and the board can all buy into.

    Let’s start with participation and regularity. Are people showing up and staying engaged? Track attendance, lateness and, for online components, log-ins and time on task. That’s your health check. If the numbers drift, then scheduling or content might need a rethink, ideally in tandem with your provider (trust me, collaboration here pays off).

    Then there’s progress in level and skills. Here, independence matters. Use baseline, mid-course and endline tests that are external to the training provider and mapped to the GSE. Because GSE operates on a 10–90 scale, it captures micro-progress that broad CEFR bands simply miss. Where the CEFR might still say “B1”, the GSE can show movement from 48 to 53. A few GSE points may not sound like much, but in the world of adult learning, that’s a genuine success story. Where CEFR might suggest stagnation, or plateauing, as we call it in Applied Linguistics - the GSE tells you the learning curve is alive and kicking.

    And finally, application on the job. Is the business experiencing tangible benefits from improved communication? And since our learners are the heart of any programme, their satisfaction and motivation levels are equally telling. Low energy or disengagement is often the first sign something’s off, long before the test scores flatten.

    These KPIs are deliberately mixed, with some being complex numbers and others experience-based. That’s intentional. Research in e-learning shows you need both if you want to understand what’s really happening in a course, not just what appears in the final test report.

    Why GSE changes the game

    The GSE isn’t just a theoretical framework, it’s an ecosystem:  courseware, AI-driven assessments, analytics, the works. My experience as an LSP (Language Service Provider) owner and Head of Studies at choices® has taught me one thing: using third-party, reliable and organization-agnostic testing gives us a massive advantage. Businesses are often promised "pies in the sky". The problem? Those pies are frequently baked and taste-tested by the same baker.

    Independent, GSE-based assessment is a genuine USP.

    It’s external to the language services provider, which makes the data credible to L&D, HR and, most importantly, the board. It’s granular, so it captures those subtle wins that keep learners motivated. And it’s consistent across time and cohorts: gold dust when budgets are tight and every line item gets scrutinised.

    When you can say, “We measure independently, we’re aligned, and here’s evidence of real progress”, you’ve earned yourself something priceless: a protected budget.

    Coming up next

    In the next post, I’ll move from "how" to "why", showing how these insights translate into measurable business outcomes. We’ll talk ROI: the costs (both obvious and hidden), the returns (both hard and soft), and the benchmarks that make all the difference. Because when you measure smartly, with GSE as your compass, everyone wins: learners, managers, HR and yes, even the boardroom sceptics.

  • Teaching with purpose: Why the GSE still works in 2025
    By Leonor Corradi
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    We live in a world in which change is a constant. While change has always existed, lately it has definitely accelerated. There is an idea in society that we should embrace change and adopt whatever is new, with an underlying assumption – wrong to many – that what is new is always better.one that is often wrong

    In the world of ELT, new materials are developed every year. It is unthinkable for most teachers to be using teaching materials that were published 10 years ago. Some would even claim that anything published before 2020 is already out-dated.

    How does all this impact on the Global Scale of English (GSE) – published over 10 years ago? When it was launched in 2014, it constituted a significant innovation in ELT. The following quotes were provided by ELT experts at the time of launch.

  • A person in a striped shirt writes with a marker on a whiteboard, holding a clip board
    Clear path to fast-track progress: Why choose assessment underpinned by the GSE
    By Natalia Wong Mexía
    Reading time: 4 minutes

    At the beginning of every school year, we welcome new learners into our classrooms with the same core question: Where are our students now, and how far can we take them?

    For English teachers, this reveals a huge challenge. In a single class, we might have one student at an A2 level, while others are solidly B1 or just entering A2+. Navigating such a wide range of abilities can feel overwhelming.

    We’ve all seen it: students can spend months (or even years) studying English and still feel like they haven’t moved up a level. Teachers work incredibly hard, and students put in the effort, but progress feels intangible. Why is that? And more importantly, how can schools make it easier to see and support that progress?

    In recent years, I have found a powerful ally in answering that question: the Global Scale of English (GSE). Backed by Pearson and aligned with the CEFR, the GSE offers more than just levels, it provides a clear, data-informed path to language growth. Most importantly, it gives teachers and school leaders the ability to set meaningful goals and measure real progress.

    But, how is this useful at the beginning of the school year?

    Starting with assessment

    To get a clear picture from the start, assessment is essential; there’s no doubt about it. However, it can't just be a punctuation mark at the end of a term or a requirement from administration. Used strategically, this first assessment can be the compass that guides instruction and curriculum decisions, empowering both teachers and students from day one. This is why choosing the correct assessment tools becomes fundamental.

    The GSE difference: Precision, clarity, confidence

    Unlike the broad bands of the CEFR, the GSE provides a granular scale from 10 to 90, breaking down each skill into precise learning objectives. This allows educators to monitor progress at a much closer level, often identifying improvements that would otherwise go unnoticed.

    When learners see that their score has moved from 36 to 42, even if their overall CEFR level hasn’t changed, they gain confidence. They recognize that learning is a continuous process rather than a series of steps. Teachers, in turn, are able to validate growth, provide clear evidence of learning and tailor instruction to the learner’s current needs, not just their general level.

    For example, two students might both be classified as "A2", but the GSE gives us a much clearer picture: a student with a GSE score of 35 is likely mastering simple sentences, while another student scoring 40 might already be comfortable writing simple stories and is ready to tackle B1-level tasks.

    This isn't just data: it's a roadmap. It tells us exactly what to teach next, allowing us to differentiate with confidence instead of relying solely on gut feeling.

    GSE tools that make it happen

    Pearson offers a comprehensive range of GSE-aligned assessment tools that support different stages of the learning journey. Each tool plays a distinct role in placement, diagnosis, benchmarking or certification.

了解有关 Global Scale of English 的更多信息

探索 Global Scale of English 并了解它如何帮助您的语言学习之旅。

探索全球语言规模

全球语言量表 (GSL) 建立在 GSE的领先研究和框架之上,支持法语、德语、意大利语和西班牙语的教育工作者和学习者快速取得进步。

探索 GSL