NEO HLS CEFR

Why the Certificate Your Employees Earn Matters — And Why Most Don’t

When a corporate English training programme ends in Sri Lanka, most employees walk away with a certificate. But not all certificates are equal. There is a significant difference between a document that proves someone attended a course and one that proves their English proficiency has reached a measurable, internationally recognised standard. That difference matters — to your employees, to your organisation, and to every employer or institution they will ever deal with.

The Problem with Most Training Certificates
The majority of English training certificates issued in Sri Lanka are participation certificates. They confirm that an employee attended a programme for a certain number of hours. They say nothing about whether that employee’s English actually improved, by how much, or to what standard.

For an HR manager trying to justify training spend, a participation certificate is not evidence of ROI. It is evidence that the sessions happened. For an employee, it carries little weight with a future employer or a global institution because there is no universal standard behind it — no way for anyone outside your organisation to understand what it actually represents.

This is the gap that CEFR certification closes.

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Inauguration of Multimedia Language Training Center at Rathmalana

Empowering Migrant Workers: HLS, IOM, and SLBFE Launch New English Language Lab

A National Challenge — and a National Solution
Every year, thousands of Sri Lankan men and women leave their families to work abroad. They go to the Middle East, Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea, and beyond — in search of better incomes and better lives. But many of them face a serious challenge before they even arrive at their destination. They do not have the English skills their employer expects. This puts them at risk — of misunderstanding instructions, of being passed over for better roles, and in some cases, of workplace exploitation.

In 2013, three organisations came together to address this challenge directly.
The Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment (SLBFE), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and HLS — Headway Learning Solutions — partnered to launch Sri Lanka’s largest Multimedia English Language Training Centre at Rathmalana. This was not simply the opening of a new classroom. It was the deployment of a proven, technology-based English Language Lab solution to a real national challenge — helping Sri Lankan workers become job-ready before they stepped on the plane.

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