探花视频

IELTS pulls Home Office bid over remote testing security fears

Largest provider of English language testing says online assessments favoured by government could undermine academic integrity

Published on
March 17, 2026
Last updated
March 17, 2026
Source: iStock/mapo

The world鈥檚 largest English language testing service has withdrawn its bid to be the provider for the UK government鈥檚 new online assessment, citing security concerns.

The Home Office鈥檚 new English Language Test (HOELT) is seeking a supplier for its 鈥渇ully remote鈥 service, which will replace the current system of in-person assessment at controlled test centres.

The International English Language Testing System (IELTS), which is run by Cambridge University Press and Assessment, the British Council and IDP Education, has withdrawn from the tender and told the Home Office that it is concerned about the聽risk to the UK immigration system from fully remote online tests.

Francesca Woodward, global managing director for English at Cambridge University Press and Assessment, said: 鈥淲e support the Home Office鈥檚 objective to strengthen security but we are concerned that plans for a remote-first English test will weaken that.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淭he most secure approach combines human expertise and digital tools while retaining full control over the test environment.鈥澛

The news comes after both the world鈥檚 leading accountancy body, the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, and the聽Law School Admissions Test announced that they were scrapping online聽assessments over cheating concerns.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

IELTS urged the government to pause and reflect on whether the planned approach best supports raising standards and security across the immigration system.聽

A spokesperson added: 鈥淭he Home Office鈥檚 planned approach would rely on unproven technologies and practices. We cannot bid for HOELT as it is currently constructed while retaining our commitment to quality, integrity and security in assessment.

鈥淭he most secure approach to the highest-stakes English proficiency tests combines in-person supervision with digital security underpinned from the start by established regulation and proven practices. We will not compromise on quality given the importance of these tests to the UK.鈥

There have been growing concerns around the quality of online tests for some time. And recent research has shown that students who take 鈥渓ess traditional鈥 English language tests to gain entry to UK universities may struggle more to adjust to the classroom.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Susan Kinnear, an expert on English proficiency and deputy vice-principal at the University of Dundee, said a 鈥渄igital first鈥 approach could only be appropriate where there is strong evidence that governance standards will be met and that outcomes can be fully verified through independent research.

鈥淔ully remote test-taking without strict governance increases the risk of malpractice, undermines academic integrity for high stakes entry into university and jeopardises student wellbeing and experience.鈥

patrick.jack@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Financial strains and the emergence of digital testing have led to concerns that anglophone universities are admitting students whose English is not good enough to allow them to succeed. But are tests really becoming less rigorous 鈥 or are universities setting pass rates that are too low? Helen Packer reports 

8 September

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT