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British Citizenship Test


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Slightly interesting - Discuss.

One in three fails citizen test

Nearly a third of foreigners wanting to make Britain their home failed their citizenship test in 2009, figures show.

Of the 906,464 people who took it, 263,641 failed - meaning the pass rate was 70.9%, Home Office figures show.

The 45-minute test on British society, history and culture is a crucial step on the road to being allowed to settle permanently or full citizenship.

Nationalities with a pass rate below 50% included Iraq, Bangladesh and Turkey - all major sources of migrants.

Some 40,200 Iraqis sat the exam, with a pass rate of 47.9%. Among the 30,014 Turks who took the test the rate was 45.9%, while out of 38,085 Bangladeshis, 21,345 failed - a pass rate of 44%.

Those from other non-EU countries with high levels of migration to the UK performed better, including Nigeria, with a pass rate of 82.5%, and Zimbabwe with a pass rate of 90.2%.

Citizens of English-speaking countries tended to do best in the 24 question multiple-choice exam.

The 13,223 Australians who took the test had a pass rate of 98%, just ahead of the United States on 97.9% and Canada on 96.9%.

Several countries achieved pass rates of 100%, although the very small number of candidates tended to skew the results. The Cook Islands' sole entrant passed.

Similarly, there were some very low pass rates from countries with a handful of candidates sitting the test - five out of the six French Guyanans who sat the test failed, giving them a pass rate of 16.7%.

And the Christmas Islands had a 100% fail rate, thanks to the failure of its sole candidate.

British society

The Home Office's Life in the UK Test is required for settlement, or indefinite leave to remain, in the UK or full British citizenship.

The test must be completed on a computer at one of 11 test centres around the UK.

HIGHEST AND LOWEST

# 100% PASS RATE: American Samoa, Andorra, Comoros, Cook Islands, East Timor, French Metropolitan, Gibraltar, Kiribati, Leichtenstein, Luxembourg, Niue, Palau, Puerto Rico, Reunion, Rhodesia, San Marino, Sao Tarme and Principe, Soviet Union, Suriname, Tuvalu, Virgin Islands, Western Sahara

# 0% PASS RATE: British Indian Ocean Territories, British Overseas Territories, Christmas Island, Netherlands Antilles, Timor Leste

Introduced in 2005, the test is meant to help new arrivals hoping to make Britain their home integrate better into British society.

It covers issues such as Britain's constitution, the originating countries of previous UK immigrants, family life in the UK and where dialects like Geordie, Scouse or Cockney come from.

More practical matters such as the minimum age to buy alcohol and tobacco and what services are provided by local authorities are also covered.

According to the Home Office website, "studying for and taking the test will give you the practical knowledge you need to live in this country and to take part in society".

Passing the citizenship test demonstrates the candidate has "a sufficient knowledge" of the English language for the purposes of applying for settlement rights or a British passport.

The test is an alternative to completing an English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) course "with civic content".

It comes as separate Home Office figures show the number of people granted British citizenship last year is at its highest level since 2005.

Figures show 203,790 people were given citizenship in 2009, up 59% from 129,375 the previous year.

There was also a 40% increase in the numbers given grants of settlement in the UK and a 45% rise in those allowed to settle for employment reasons.

The data comes from the International Passenger Survey of long-term international migration.

Explaining the large gap between the number of people who passed the citizenship test and those who were granted citizenship last year, a home office spokesman said there was often a "time lag" between passing the test and applying for citizenship.

In addition, he said passing the test did not guarantee citizenship and some applicants were refused it "on other grounds".

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_n...ics/8707152.stm

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-- BBC 28/05/10

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Edited by cdnvic
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What would be really interesting is getting British Citizens to take the test and see how many pass.....guessing they would get 100% on questions related to what benefits you can get, and the location of their nearest DHSS office... :)

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I am a uk national with a fairly good education i took the test and got 71% some questions were compleatly stupid and had no relevance to life in the uk. One question asked was, "who was the next monarch after Queen Victoria"? Why does anyone who wishes to live in the uk possibly need to know this?

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I am a uk national with a fairly good education i took the test and got 71% some questions were compleatly stupid and had no relevance to life in the uk. One question asked was, "who was the next monarch after Queen Victoria"? Why does anyone who wishes to live in the uk possibly need to know this?

I totally agree. But I think some knowledge of history and culture is desirable although that is too extreme.

Who was it by the way? ;-)

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Victoria, Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII, George VI, Elizabeth II. All from memory, does that make me some form of geek?!

I agree that some of the questions seem irrelevant; but anyone with an ESOL entry level 3 or above standard of English should be able to study the material and pass. What is interesting is that native English speakers did well, whilst non native speakers didn't. Which indicates, to me at least, that it's not so much the questions that are at fault but that maybe too many people are attempting the test when their English isn't up to the task, and so they should be following the ESOL with citizenship course route instead.

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Victoria, Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII, George VI, Elizabeth II. All from memory, does that make me some form of geek?!

I agree that some of the questions seem irrelevant; but anyone with an ESOL entry level 3 or above standard of English should be able to study the material and pass. What is interesting is that native English speakers did well, whilst non native speakers didn't. Which indicates, to me at least, that it's not so much the questions that are at fault but that maybe too many people are attempting the test when their English isn't up to the task, and so they should be following the ESOL with citizenship course route instead.

Not a geek but Edward VIII was never king of England as he abdicated before the coronation thus propelling George VI into becoming king.

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True, he was never crowned. However, he ascended the throne immediately upon the death of his father, George V, on 20 January 1936 and reigned until his abdication on 10 December 1936. Indeed, he could not have abdicated were he not King.

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