Sunday, March 24, 2019

Task 1 Feedback - Forested Area Table (Band 6 for TA)

If you're looking for an introduction to how to write a Task 1 report, I would highly recommend that you watch the three part series "How to Write the Best Overview" which I've linked here.

Just as misunderstanding the question is the bugaboo of many IELTS candidates in Task 2, going for "low hanging fruit" when selecting information for your overview is a problem in Task 1.

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Truths, Falsehoods, and Not Given's - Some IELTS Basics


If you were looking for advice on how to approach the common T/F/NG question type from the reading test, I'm sorry. Maybe in the future, I'll write such a thing.  In this blog, I just want to share some IELTS truths, falsehoods, and information that is simply not given. 

The IELTS is just for those who want to study abroad. 

– FALSE


The International English Language Testing System (IELTS) is the fastest growing English proficiency test in the world. Over 3 million tests were given last year globally.

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Writing Task 1: How to Craft the Best Overview

A three part series on crafting the best overview.  Part 1 and 3 are in a lecture format, recorded at a seminar hosted by my school.  Part 2 is from my computer, discussing the parts that get left out.


What is the main feature of this Pizza? 





 



My friend, Band 8, noted to me the other day that the Task One writing paper is the ukulele of the IELTS world. Like the uke, it's thought of as easy and cute,  and it certainly doesn't get enough respect in the IELTS instruction community compared to it's brother the Task 2 guitar. 

I'm here to stand up for Task One just like I do for my beloved ukulele!  Honestly, I find some task one's fascinatingly complex. They're multi-layered puzzles which often hide information

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Writing Task 2 - Random Question Picker


There's only one "real" authentic source for actual examples of past test questions on the IELTS test: The Official Cambridge Test Papers, Books 1 to 13.

It is rumored  that Question Types exist in the archives of the Oldest Books, Testaments 1-5, which are no longer being used,  and using them wouldn't be very effective practice. That leaves 7 tomes with four Task 2 questions to practice.

What to do when you've run out? Use blasphemous un-official materials? Oh so often their questions sound like the word of IELTS, but are missing a key word here or there in the wording of the T in TR, thus tainting it.