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CaMLA

CaMLA
CaMLA logo.jpeg
Established 1941
Type Not-for-profit
Purpose Examination board - qualifications for learners and teachers of English
Headquarters Michigan, USA
Region served
Global - operating in 60 countries
Membership
497 test centers
Parent organization
Cambridge English Language Assessment and the University of Michigan
Website www.cambridgemichigan.org www.facebook.com/camlaglobal
Formerly called
English Language Institute Testing and Certification Division at the University of Michigan

CaMLA, formerly known as the English Language Institute Testing and Certification Division at the University of Michigan, has been providing English language assessments, learning resources, teacher development, consultancy and research since 1941.

Their range of assessments, which include what are often referred to as the Michigan Tests, is used for university admissions, IEP programs, K-12 ELL programs, professional licensing, and employment.

CaMLA is a not-for-profit collaboration between the University of Michigan and the University of Cambridge – two institutions with a long history of research and development in the field of language assessment, teaching and learning.

Cambridge Michigan Language Assessments (CaMLA) was established in 2010 by two organizations with a long history in English language assessment: Cambridge English Language Assessment, part of the University of Cambridge, and the English Language Institute Testing and Certificate Division of the University of Michigan. The organizations have a number of similarities – both university-based, not-for-profit exam boards, with a mission to support research and learning.

CaMLA was created as a joint venture to develop the Michigan tests and services, originally established by the English Language Institute (ELI) of the University of Michigan. It is therefore building on 70 years of research and development in language teaching, learning, assessment, applied linguistics and teacher education throughout the world.

The ELI was established at the University of Michigan in 1941 and was the first of its kind in the United States, with a dual function of teaching and research. In its first year, the ELI introduced an intensive course in English as a foreign language – the first ever offered on a university campus. This was started as an experimental program, catering for the handful of foreign students in U.S. universities prior to World War II. However, by 1948, there were 25,000 foreign students in U.S. universities and the ELI became a key player in teaching English to international students and a model for programs across the country.

From 1946, the ELI English Testing Program began to take shape. In 1953, under contract to the United States Information Agency, the ELI developed the ECPE (Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English) exam for use abroad. By the late 1950s, ELI had international language development programs in countries on five continents and by the 1960s -1970s, Michigan tests were being used by increasing numbers of schools, universities and institutes, nationally and internationally.


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