IELTS Testing Centres in Senegal
In total, there is one test location in Senegal that offer IELTS exams. You can select the one which is closer to you.
There are two types of test format available for IELTS exams: paper-based or computer-delivered. For both formats, the Speaking Section is done with a real IELTS examiner on a face-to-face basis.
Dakar, Senegal
British Council Senegal
Street Address: Rue AAB-68 Zone B, Dakar, Senegal
Telephone Number: 221 338692700
Contact Email: information@britishcouncil.sn
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.com.sn/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (XOF) |
2020/07/25 | IELTS Academic | 152138 | |
2020/08/22 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 152138 | |
2020/09/26 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 152138 |
IELTS Exam Fee in Senegal
According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in Senegal is 152138 XOF.
List of cities in Senegal where you can take the IELTS tests
- Dakar
More about Senegal
History
Settled since prehistoric times, the area of today’s Senegal stood since the 9th century BC. a. in the sphere of influence of the Tukulor, Wolof and Fulbe as well as the realms of Gana and Mali. At the mouth of Senegal, which was probably visited by Phoenician seafarers in ancient times, Portuguese settled in from 1446, followed in the 16th century by the Dutch, to whom Portuguese possessions were lost. The French settled in this area from the 17th century (in 1659 the founding of Saint-Louis, later the conquest of Rufisque and the island of Gorée). By 1854 they had strengthened their influence so much that they could proclaim the colony of Senegal. Under Governor L. L. C. Faidherbe French rule extended upstream until 1865; the economic focus was the Dakar, founded in 1857. In 1879–90 the conquest of Senegal was completed within its current borders, and in 1895 the colony of Senegal became part of French West Africa. 1848–51 and from 1871 the colony sent a representative to the French National Assembly; In 1904 it received its own administration; In 1920 a colonial council was set up with some legislative powers. During World War II, the colonial administration remained loyal to the Vichy government until 1943. In 1946 Senegal received the status of a French overseas territory; In 1957 France granted internal autonomy. In 1958 Senegal became an autonomous republic within the French community. In 1959 Senegal joined forces with French Sudan to form the Mali Federation, which gained independence on June 20, 1960, but broke up on August 20, 1960. On September 5, 1960, Senegal became an independent republic under President L. S. Senghor.
The leading political force in Senegal since 1958 has been the Union Progressiste Sénégalaise (UPS). Programmatic tensions between President Senghor, also Secretary General of UPS, and Prime Minister Mamadou Dia (* 1910, † 2009) reached a climax in December 1962. While Senghor wanted to combine traditions of African culture and history with a modern concept of society under the guiding principle of “democratic African socialism”, Dia had drawn closer to socialist positions based on the model of the communist states. After an attempted coup, Dia was deposed and arrested (released from custody in 1974). Senghor, 1962–70 also Prime Minister, converted Senegal in 1966 on the basis of the UPS into a one-party state, in which, however, civil liberties were partially preserved. Signs of a gradual return to democratic pluralism were the admission of further parties since 1974, such as the Parti Démocratique Sénégalais (PDS) under Secretary General Abdoulaye Wade. In 1976 the UPS was renamed the Parti Socialiste (PS). In terms of foreign policy, Senegal under Senghor leaned closely to France.
After being re-elected four times (1963, 1968, 1973, 1978), Senghor resigned as President in 1980 for reasons of age; He was succeeded by Prime Minister Abdou Diouf, who had been in office since 1970. As President (1983, 1988 and 1993 re-elected), 1983–91 at the same time as Prime Minister, Diouf sought to initiate a new, less paternalistic domestic political development with the unhindered admission of parties, a dialogue with opposition forces and the reform of the cooperative system. In terms of foreign policy, he tried to improve relations with communist states in Africa (including Angola, Ethiopia).
After Senegalese troops put down an attempted coup in Gambia in 1981 at the request of Gambian President Dawda Kairaba Jawara (* 1924, † 2019), Senegal and Gambia formed the Senegambia Confederation in 1982, which was dissolved by mutual agreement in 1989. Against the background of economic and social tensions, pogroms broke out in the border area between Senegal and Mauritania in 1989, during which black Africans from Mauritania and Moors from Senegal were expelled.
The devaluation of the senegales. The currency (CFA franc) led to serious riots in the capital Dakar in January 1994. In 1996, certain central government competencies (e.g. health, education, culture, spatial planning, ecology) were transferred to the regions by law, thereby initiating decentralization. With Wade’s victory(PDS) in the presidential elections in February / March 2000, the 40-year rule of the socialists came to an end; at the same time, a government coalition of seven parties was formed for the first time, but it broke up in March 2001. After the parliamentary elections in April 2001, a coalition of several parties ruled again. In January 2001, a new constitution was introduced through a referendum, which guarantees basic human rights and a variety of parties. At the end of September the state ferry »Joola« sank after a storm in the Atlantic on the route between the southern part of the country and the capital Dakar. More than 1,800 people were killed. In April 2004, President Wade reorganized the cabinet for the fourth time in four years. In the same year the death penalty was abolished.