IELTS for working abroad
As a University Lecturer seeking registration, licensing, or a skilled-migration visa abroad, IELTS serves as formal proof that you can operate at a professional academic level in English — delivering lectures, supervising students, writing research, and engaging in institutional governance. The bar is set high because your role requires sustained, precise, high-register communication across all four skills, not just conversational fluency. Focus especially on Academic Writing and Speaking, since these mirror the core tasks of your job: constructing well-argued written discourse and presenting complex ideas clearly under pressure.
There's no single national figure: the body that registers University Lecturers in Zambia (and your visa route) sets the requirement. Find your exact target on that body's official requirements page.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
Anglophone countries such as South Africa, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and Rwanda have a significant number of English-medium universities, and some are beginning to formalise English-proficiency requirements for foreign academic staff through IELTS or equivalent. Immigration rules differ substantially by country, and some nations require work permits sponsored by the employing institution, which will typically specify their own language evidence requirements in the contract or job advertisement.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because university lecturers are judged on their ability to produce coherent, well-structured academic prose — exactly what Task 2 essays and Task 1 data-description tasks train — and a strong writing score often weighs heavily in both immigration and institutional recognition decisions.
Planning to study first? See IELTS for studying in Zambia.