What are the 4 levels of language proficiency?
None of the most commonly used language proficiency scales have 4 levels of language proficiency.
- The CEFR scale has six levels: A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, and C2 (where A1 is the lowest level).
- The ACTFL scale has six levels: Novice (with the sub-levels Novice Low, Novice Mid, and Novice High), Intermediate (with the sub-levels Intermediate Low, Intermediate Mid, and Intermediate High), Advanced (with the sub-levels Advanced Low, Advanced Mid, and Advanced High), Superior, and Distinguished.
- The ILR scale also has six levels: 0 (with the sub-levels 0 [No Proficiency] and 0+ [Memorized Proficiency]), 1 (with the sub-levels 1 [Elementary Proficiency] and 1+ [Elementary Proficiency Plus]), 2 (with the sub-levels 2 [Limited Working Proficiency] and 2+ [Limited Working Proficiency Plus]), 3 (with the sub-levels 3 [Professional Working Proficiency] and 3+ [Professional Working Proficiency Plus]), 4 (with the sub-levels 4 [Full Professional Proficiency] and 4+ [Full Professional Proficiency Plus]), and 5 (Native or Bilingual Proficiency).
If you’re writing your resume and want to include details of your language proficiency levels, QuillBot’s free AI chat can help you formulate the descriptions.