You sat for the national exams threes times and thrice you came close to passing them. That means you're pretty good. You don't need to take a fourth exam and earn a 60 to prove it. You can start taking translation jobs right now.
Ask anyone who has passed the said exams and got the said certificate: Does the certificate matter on a practical level? Does a word or expression you've been having trouble recalling suddenly pop up in your head if you pull the certificate out of your pocket and start brandishing it?
Ask any good translator that you know of: Are you good because of the certificate? All good translators will tell you it's not about the certificate. It's about you.
I know of a few translators whose services are sought - they don't have a certificate. On the practical level, if you do a translation for someone and they like what they see, they'll keep asking for your services with or without a certificate.
If I were you, I'd keep talking to the American teacher for English practice. Help her out in translation whenever I can. Do my teaching job at the school while taking translations for local businesses and keep honing my skills in the process.
When the next exam comes around, if you feel like it, you'd take it and pass it (Sounds easy? Yes, because you'd have been doing practical translations on a practical level - in real life - for some time). If the certificate helps in getting you a better PAYING job, fine. Even if it does, you should know you'll still need to be good to sustain the job or improve on it because, say, six months into the job, when time comes for management to evaluate your job and see if you deserve a raise, I'd bet you two dollars that the bosses won't be opening the drawl again to check if you had the certificate.
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