3 months ago (02/04/22) | 106 Views |
IELTS Tips for All Four Test Sections
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IELTS Tips
Here are some IELTS tips for all four test section you should follow for qualify IELTS test for study abroad. IETLTS help you to get visa for study abroad and also you will get enrolled in best universities and colleges in abroad for your chosen course.
IELTS Tips for Preparation
IELTS Listening Section
As with every part of the test, in IELTS Listening, where you have 30 minutes to answer 40 questions on 4 listening tasks, the facts can be tricky:-
- You only hear the recordings once
- Sections are progressively more difficult in terms of complexity and question types
- They follow each other quickly.
- Concentration becomes a problem, which can lead to leaving your answers to certain questions blank
This means that in the listening test, time is apparently under control. Our only choice is to keep pace, concentrate and apply the following strategies:-
- Use the time before each task to read the questions carefully.
- Try to answer all the questions, but don’t panic if you miss one.
- Finally, take the time to check for preventable errors, such as spelling
IELTS Reading Section
In the IELTS reading test, where we have 40 more questions, but have 60 minutes to answer them, the time factor is simply that the texts are too long to read. You can’t read everything. You need to apply the right reading strategies from the start of your IELTS preparation until the day of the exam. These include:
- Make a checklist of a range of questions. Which do you find the trickiest?
- Practice reading for the essentials (skimming) and reading for the details (scanning) as much as possible
- Always work from the questions (what you need to do, what you are looking for) to the text. This will help you save time.
- Increase your reading speed by accepting longer texts at the same time and/or reducing the time spent on each reading
- Use underlining to help identify relevant parts of text
- Don’t worry about words you might not understand. Try to see them in their context, in a big picture.
IELTS Writing Section
For so many of you feel IELTS Writing is the hardest part of IELTS. With some differences between the educational and general education versions, it consists of two parts:
- Task 1: Either a description and interpretation of some visual data (pie chart or graphs, line chart or graphs) or a letter on a given topic.
- Task 2: Controversial essay on a given topic.
Two tasks in 60 minutes with a third spent on task 1 and the remaining 40 minutes on task 2. Many find this extremely difficult. But the key is to strictly control the timing of each part and this can be achieved through practice and helpful feedback. For example:
- Task 1: 5 minutes to read the question (the context and the tasks if it is the letter GT; the graphic data and its most important information and interpretation for the academic version)
- 10-12 minutes of writing, using knowledge and skills acquired during IELTS preparation, ensuring you include an outline and have outlined and compared all relevant details.
- 2-3 minutes to check, paying particular attention to correcting avoidable errors such as verb tenses, subject-verb concordance and spelling.
- Task 2: 5-8 minutes to develop an essay outline and structure. If, for example, you are asked to discuss both sides of an argument and give your own opinion, list about 3 or 4 “for” and “against” points. Include one or two examples from your knowledge or personal experience.
- 25-30 minutes to write.
- 5-8 minutes to check.
IELTS Speaking Section
Finally, IELTS Speaking seems to be like Listening because you have no real control over the time. The examiner engages you in conversation and you have very little or no time to “think” except of course in part 2 where you talk about a topic for 2 minutes and you have a precious minute to prepare after you have received your checklist which looks like this: Describe the person in your family that you admire the most. You should say:
- What is his relationship with you?
- What she/he has done in your living?
- What he/she is doing now?
And explain why you admire this person so much. You’d be surprised how many IELTS candidates spend the 60 seconds of preparation writing almost nothing on the paper provided. The important point is to use those precious seconds to plan your response. The easiest way is to follow the 4 benchmarks you already have and note the useful vocabulary to use in each part. By “helpful” I don’t mean the obvious sequence of, shall we say, “father, helped me, good advice, old now, retired” but something more substantial. Remember that one of the main things to success in IELTS is to show that you have a rich and diverse vocabulary.
Here is an opportunity to show it. This is just an example, but tries it yourself with this and other conversation starters:-
- Introduction: dear family/society based on family structure/culture.
- What I admire the most: my father: key person in the family; maintains it.
- Guided me and my siblings; career support and advice + personal life.
- Showed me the way but never forced me, left the final decisions to me.
- A helping hand also to many others: neighbours, colleagues.
- Now retired; pursues his favourite hobbies (gardening and photography).
- But they always available there for all of us.
- For me an inspiration; lucky to have it.
Maybe in a minute these notes are too much to ask but, trust me, it’s worth it. Start using this minute to your advantage. You will see the benefits. The mention of the importance of vocabulary brings us to the second way to make what looks difficult, easy or easier in the IELTS test.
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