Teacher Passport
If English is your additional language, two assumptions can cost you a test window: that an EAL/D background earns a concession, and that a strong IELTS guarantees a literacy pass. Neither is true. This guide is for international and EAL/D initial teacher education students. It covers what is genuinely different for your situation and where to focus your preparation, drawing on ACER, UNSW, and NESA sources.
Teacher Passport
Eligibility for LANTITE is based on enrolment in an accredited initial teacher education (ITE) course, undergraduate or postgraduate, plus prospective candidates not yet enrolled. There is no citizenship carve-out and no first-language carve-out. International students and EAL/D (English as an additional language or dialect) students sit the same test, to the same standard, as domestic native-English speakers. From 2024, students must have a test attempt in their first year of study.
This is not optional. Passing both components is a requirement of every accredited ITE program in Australia, regardless of where you were born or what language you grew up speaking. Prospective candidates who are not yet enrolled are also eligible, so if you are an international applicant planning an ITE course you can register and sit before your program begins, which buys you time.
The first-year-attempt rule matters for planning. From 2024, enrolled students must have a test attempt in their first year of study, so you cannot leave LANTITE until the end of your course. For international and EAL/D students that timing is worth respecting: sitting early in the program leaves room for a resit if you miss the standard on the first attempt, rather than being caught late with a test window and a graduation deadline overlapping.
For the general format, fees, attempts, and test windows, see the pillar LANTITE guide at teacherpassport.com.au/lantite. This guide focuses only on what is different for the international and EAL/D audience.
Teacher Passport
This is the point that catches people too late. ACER grants reasonable adjustments, also called special test conditions, only for candidates with "a disability, mental health, or health-related need and those who are neurodiverse." English being an additional language is not a qualifying ground. There is no extra time, no concession, and no language-based adjustment for your background alone.
ACER also states that "no special consideration can be given to candidates' results for this test." There is no post-test score adjustment for anyone, on any ground. You meet the standard or you sit again.
A diagnosed disability, medical, or neurodiverse condition can qualify for reasonable adjustments on its own merits, and such a condition can co-occur with an EAL/D background. The adjustment is granted for the diagnosed condition, never for the language background itself.
Adjustments must be applied for after you register, with supporting documentation that meets ACER's "Documentation Requirements: Guidelines for Reasonable Adjustments (January 2026)." Apply only if you have a documented condition, and do not plan your timeline around a language concession, because none exists.
Teacher Passport
The literacy component is 65 questions in a single section, around two hours, in selected-response and short-answer format. There is no extended or essay writing. It splits into two content sub-domains.
| Sub-domain | Share | What it measures |
|---|---|---|
| Reading | ~two-thirds | Comprehend, interpret, and evaluate a range of text types and formats |
| Technical Skills of Writing | ~one-third | Word usage, grammar, punctuation, spelling, and the organisation of ideas |
The contexts are drawn from the professional experience of teachers: policies, reports, student records, and professional communications. The reading items present the kind of real texts you would meet on the job, and they ask you to comprehend, interpret, and evaluate rather than recall facts. The register is Standard Australian English in a professional context, not conversational English and not general academic essay writing.
As UNSW puts it, "the LANTITE does not test oral skills, only intensive reading, and technical skills in writing." A candidate who is fluent in spoken English can still lose marks on the technical-writing items, because spoken fluency and written precision are different skills. The Technical Skills of Writing sub-domain rewards accuracy in word usage, grammar, punctuation, and spelling — the parts of written English that conversation lets you skate over.
The test measures a specific professional register, not your general English proficiency. That is why drilling technical writing precision pays off more than broad English study.
Teacher Passport
IELTS and LANTITE literacy measure different things, are set by different bodies, and exist for different purposes. IELTS, along with your university or NESA English-proficiency requirement, is an English-language proficiency gate. It confirms you can function in English at a given level.
LANTITE literacy is a personal-literacy floor benchmarked to the top 30% of the Australian adult population, native and non-native speakers combined, validated in 2017 against the OECD's PIAAC survey. Different purpose, different body, different benchmark. They overlap but do not substitute for each other. IELTS weights speaking and listening heavily, and LANTITE tests neither. LANTITE drills technical written-English precision, which IELTS samples more lightly.
Your university's English entry requirement is a separate gate that does not guarantee a LANTITE pass. As an illustration only, UNSW's international entry standard sits around IELTS 7.0 overall with 7.5 in speaking and listening, and the graduation equivalent around IELTS 7.5 with 8.0 in speaking and listening. These exact bands vary by provider and year, so confirm them on your own provider's current page.
A third, separate gate: NESA's English-proficiency rule for accreditation of overseas-qualified applicants is an IELTS average of 7.5, with no less than 7.0 in reading and writing and 8.0 in speaking and listening. Applicants whose qualifications are all from Australia, NZ, the UK, USA, Canada, or Ireland are exempt. This is a NESA accreditation gate, separate again from LANTITE.
Teacher Passport
Numeracy is not a refuge from the language demand. The component is delivered through worded, multi-step questions across three areas, and reading each question accurately is part of the task itself. The language load that catches EAL/D candidates in the literacy component does not disappear here — it just arrives in a different form.
| Numeracy content area | Approx. share |
|---|---|
| Number and Algebra | ~65% |
| Measurement and Geometry | ~25% |
| Statistics and Probability | ~10% |
The weighting tells you where to focus. With Number and Algebra making up around two-thirds of the questions, most of the worded items you will face sit in that area, while Measurement and Geometry and then Statistics and Probability carry progressively smaller shares. A typical item embeds the numbers in a sentence or two of context rather than presenting a bare calculation, and a multi-step question asks you to extract the right figures, decide on the operation, and carry the result through to a second step.
Comprehension first, calculate second. Because the questions are worded, slow careful reading matters as much as the arithmetic. Misreading a multi-step question loses the mark even when your maths is sound, and a reading error in the first step feeds straight into the second. Treat each item as a short comprehension task: read for what is being asked, identify the figures that matter, then calculate.
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Your preparation should target the two areas where this audience most often loses marks: technical writing precision and worded comprehension. A targeted plan beats general English study.
This is passable with focused preparation. The two traps to dismantle are the EAL/D-concession myth and the IELTS-equals-LANTITE assumption. Clear those, target your weak sub-domain, and sit early enough to have a resit window in hand.
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Yes — they must. Eligibility is based on enrolment in an accredited ITE course, with no citizenship or first-language carve-out. You sit the same test, to the same standard, as domestic students, and passing both components is required of every accredited program.
It is the same test for everyone, but the demands that catch EAL/D candidates are specific: technical written-English precision in literacy, and worded multi-step questions in numeracy. Spoken fluency does not cover these, so targeted grammar, punctuation, and careful-reading practice matters more than general English study.
No. ACER grants reasonable adjustments only for candidates with a disability, mental health, health-related need, or who are neurodiverse. English being an additional language is not a qualifying ground, so there is no extra time and no concession for language background alone.
Not necessarily. IELTS is an English-proficiency gate; LANTITE literacy is a personal-literacy floor benchmarked to the top 30% of the Australian adult population. They measure different things, and IELTS weights speaking and listening, which LANTITE does not test. A strong IELTS helps but does not guarantee a pass.
These are separate gates. University English entry requirements and NESA's accreditation English-proficiency rule are set by those bodies for their own purposes. LANTITE is a national test administered by ACER with its own standard. Clearing one does not exempt you from the other.
No. The numeracy questions are worded, so reading load is real, but there is no language-based adjustment for it. Adjustments apply only to diagnosed disability, medical, or neurodiverse conditions. Treat each worded question as a comprehension task before doing the maths.
Teacher Passport