Home » Teaching English as a Foreign Language: 2022
Errata Corrige: A mistake was detected in Table 5, in the data illustrated for General English Standard, Intensive English and English specific purposes. As a result, the third salient point, fourth paragraph in the commentary and Chart 3 were also updated. Online documents were amended on 8 June 2023 at 09:00 hrs.
The majority of students attending English language courses in Malta came from Italy (16.3 per cent), followed by France (13.1 per cent) and Germany (12.6 per cent). Overall, 70.5 per cent of total students originated from an EU country (Table 1).
The largest share of language students fell within the 15 and under age bracket, accounting for 24.1 per cent of the total students following ELT courses. Students aged 50 and over were in the minority and numbered 4,639. Female students outnumbered males, and accounted for 62.3 per cent of the entire ELT student population (Table 2 and 3).
July was the busiest month for local licensed ELT schools for courses attendance, accounting for 21.6 per cent of the annual total. August and October followed at 17.5 and 9.7 per cent respectively (Table 4).
The most popular course uptake in local licensed ELT schools was ‘General English: Standard’, whereby a total of 39,351 students, or 69.4 per cent opted for this course. This was followed by the ‘Intensive English’ courses, with 20.7 per cent of total students (Table 5).
Foreign students enrolled in local licensed ELT schools accounted for 246,314 student weeks. The absolute majority of courses (99.3 per cent of total student weeks) were held physically while online courses accounted for only 0.7 per cent. The average number of student weeks during the year under review stood at 4.3, a decrease of 0.6 compared to previous year (Table 7). With an average of 14.5 weeks, students from Colombia recorded the highest number of student weeks, followed by South Korean and Chilean students with average student weeks at 13.3 and 13.1 weeks respectively (Table 8 and 9).
In 2022, teaching and academic staff in local licensed ELT schools numbered 618, with the largest proportion (26.2 per cent) being in 55 and over age group. Female teachers accounted for 69.7 per cent of the total (Table 10). Non-teaching staff amounted to 511, of whom 65.8 per cent were employed on a full-time basis (Table 10 and 11).
Errata Corrige: A mistake was detected in Table 5, in the data illustrated for General English Standard, Intensive English and English specific purposes. As a result, the third salient point, fourth paragraph in the commentary and Chart 3 were also updated. Online documents were amended on 8 June 2023 at 09:00 hrs.
2022
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2022
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2022
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1. English specific purposes courses include business English.
2. ‘Other’ includes exam preparation courses, one-to-one lessons, combination of courses, and other courses.
3. Totals may not add up due to rounding.
2022
No Data Found
Note: Totals may not add up due to rounding.
2021 and 2022
No Data Found
1. Data used in this News Release is based on information collected by the Ministry for Education, Sport, Youth, Research and Innovation which was subsequently analysed by NSO.
2. Data was collected by the ELT Council during the period December 2021-February 2022. All local licensed English Language Teaching (ELT) schools operating in 2020 responded to this questionnaire. A full list of ELT schools can be accessed here.
3. Breakdowns by country are based on the students’ citizenship as provided by the student. Thus, figures for foreign citizens are not directly comparable to other tourism figures published by the NSO.
4. In 2021, following disruptions and unprecedented scenarios due to COVID-19, foreign students attended both physical courses in Malta, as well as online courses.
5. For the scope of this release ‘teaching/academic staff’ includes all ELT permit holders. Staff employed with different schools carrying out the same role are counted once.
6. Figures on type of course followed and type of accommodation cannot be compared with data of previous years due to methodological enhancements held in 2020.
7. Definitions:
ELT schools refer to institutions which provide English-related courses for foreign students. More information can be accessed here.
Teaching/Academic staff refer to professional personnel directly involved in teaching students, including teachers, assistant teachers, ELT instructors and other ELT permit holders.
Non-Teaching staff refer to persons employed by educational institutions who have no instructional responsibilities, and do not hold an ELT permit. Examples are school management staff, front office staff, group leaders, administration staff, sales, marketing and reservations staff.
Full-time employment: includes employed persons on a full-time basis.
Part-time employment: includes employed persons whose normal hours are less than those of comparable full-time workers.
Casual employment: includes temporary workers, working irregular hours, who are employed on a part-time basis.
8. Number of student weeks by foreign students is calculated as follows: total number of days divided by seven.
9. Average number of student weeks per student is calculated as follows: total number of weeks divided by total number of students.
10. References to this news release are to be cited appropriately.
11. For further assistance send your request through our online request from.
12. A detailed news release calendar is available online.
Errata Corrige: A mistake was detected in Table 5, in the data illustrated for General English Standard, Intensive English and English specific purposes. As a result, the third salient point, fourth paragraph in the commentary and Chart 3 were also updated. Online documents were amended on 8 June 2023 at 09:00 hrs.