10 IELTS Writing Tips From Examiners, Teachers & Students - Improve Your IELTS Score
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In this lesson, you can get ten essential tips for your IELTS writing exam.
Well, we collected feedback from students who took IELTS, and also interviewed IELTS
Our aim is to give you the most up-to-date IELTS advice, and also give you tips which
We’ve also included our own top tips, which we’ve developed through teaching hundreds
You can study with us too, if you want; book classes on Oxford Online English dot com.
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If your overall IELTS score is between two bands, your score is rounded up.
For example, if you score 7-7-7-6 in the four sections, you’ll get band seven overall.
In the writing exam, it probably doesn’t work the same way.
Well, there’s no clear information publicly available, and even the examiners we spoke
However, according to the best information we have: if you score seven for task achievement,
seven for coherence/cohesion, seven for vocabulary and six for grammar in your writing exam,
that will be rounded *down* to 6.5.
It means that you can’t have any major weaknesses.
If your target score is seven, you probably need to score seven in all four areas.
Do you make multiple small grammar errors when you write?
This will likely limit your grammar score to six.
If you get one score of six, then getting band seven overall becomes much more difficult.
OK, if you score band eight in one area, then you can score band six somewhere else and
However, it’s rare that we see students with some scores much higher than others.
Generally, the four scores – TA, C&C, vocabulary and grammar – are close together.
So, if your target score is, for example, seven, you need to aim for seven in all four
Find your weakest area, find out what you need to do to hit your target score, and give
it extra focus when preparing.
In the past, IELTS examiners would count how many words you had written, and apply a penalty
to your TA score if you hadn’t written enough.
So, you shouldn’t do this in the exam, either.
The idea is that you can’t write a full answer while writing less than the word count,
and this will be reflected in your TA score anyway; there’s no need for an extra word
So, focus on writing full, well-developed answers which answer every part of the task.
When practising, you should count your words.
However, don’t focus on the word count as a number.
If you find it difficult to meet the word count, this strongly suggests that you aren’t
Ask yourself: what could you add?
What ideas could you explain in more depth?
How long do you think the examiner will spend reading your writing?
It depends, but the basic answer is: “not long.”
Examiners we spoke to said they spent around five minutes per task on average; one mentioned
that he has heard of examiners spending only three minutes per task.
If I’m marking some IELTS writing, I need ten to fifteen minutes to do a thorough job.
If the examiner is spending only five minutes – or less – then they’re not reading
It means you should follow obvious strategies.
Don’t experiment; give the examiner what they’re expecting to see.
For example, in general task one, write a separate paragraph for each bullet point in
In academic task one, put your overview in a separate paragraph near the start of your
In task two, start each body paragraph with a clear topic sentence.
You don’t *have* to do these things to get high scores, but most people follow these
If you take a different approach, examiners might not take the time to read your work
carefully and understand what you’re doing.
It’s hopefully obvious that if you can’t write a high-scoring IELTS answer in two hours,
then you can’t do it in one hour, either.
Often, IELTS students try to write with a time limit, like in the exam.
Of course, the time limit is important.
But, if your writing has problems, then you should fix the problems first, and worry about
For example, many IELTS students we meet have big problems with TA in task two.
Often, the problems relate to planning and organising ideas.
When we start practising, it’s common for students to need thirty minutes – or sometimes
longer – just to *plan* one task two answer.
If this is your situation, then don’t worry about time limits at first.
Focus on writing an answer at your target band score.
If it takes three hours, then OK.
Once you can *consistently* hit your target band score, then start training for speed.
Here’s a common question which IELTS students ask: how do I get ideas for my essay in task
two?
You need to solve that problem.
If you’re in the exam, and you read the task two question, and you think “I don’t
have anything to say about this”, then you’re in a bad position.
There’s not much that can help you at that moment.
You need to prepare for this *before* the exam.
First, read as many task two questions as you can, and think about them.
Second, if you don’t have a strong opinion, then try to find some news articles on the
Read articles with different opinions, and think about what you do or don’t agree with,
If you have someone to practise speaking with, then debating is also helpful.
Take a topic; you and your partner choose one side each.
Then, you have a debate, you try to support your side and argue against your partner’s
Third, here’s a useful exercise: take a task two question and write two practice essays
For example, look at this question.
To practise, write two essays.
The first argues that climate change is the most serious environmental problem facing
humanity, and the second argues that other environmental issues are equally serious.
But, to score seven or higher in task two, you need detailed, well-supported ideas in
A question: what score will you get if your essay is not 100% on topic?
IELTS examiners have a term: ‘on-topic, off-task’.
They use this for essays which are in the right general area, but which don’t answer
Such essays are limited to band four for TA, and five for C&C, *maximum.* This problem
applies to many of the IELTS essays we see from our students.
You must train yourself to read the question carefully.
Think about *every single word*.
For example, look at the task two you saw just now.
Before you can even think about this question, you need to think about some of the ideas.
For example, what do ‘serious’ and ‘important’ mean here?
What does it mean for one environmental problem to be more serious than another?
What are ‘other environmental issues’?
These are not simple questions.
We often see IELTS students who start writing without thinking about these things.
Then, they write an on-topic, off-task essay.
You might be watching this thinking: “That wouldn’t happen to me!”
It’s one of the biggest and most common problems we see.
Now, look at a different version.
In the task two instructions, it matters whether a word is singular or plural.
For example, if the task asks you to describe ‘the main problem’, then you need to focus
on one, and only one, problem.
If the task asks you to describe ‘problems’, then you should include at least two.
The same is true with other words you’ll see in many IELTS questions, like ‘benefits’,
‘advantages’, ‘disadvantages’, and so on.
Pay attention to whether the word is singular or plural.
Stronger answers – band eight or nine – tend to be longer, especially in task two.
It’s quite difficult to write a full, well-developed essay answer in only 250 words.
Remember also that there’s no upper limit.
Of course, you need to be careful that your essay is well-organised, with logical paragraphing
and a clear progression from the beginning to the end.
So, if you’re aiming for higher scores – 7.5 or above – you should probably be aiming
to write a longer response in task 2.
Writing more allows you to develop your ideas in more depth and
use a wider range of vocabulary -
both of which are necessary for the highest band.
Sometimes, you’ll hear IELTS advice like ‘your ideas don’t matter, so long as they’re
relevant’, or ‘it doesn’t matter if what you write is true or not’.
We might even have said similar things in the past!
This advice is true to a point; if your target is band six, then sure, this advice is fine.
If you’re aiming for higher scores – seven and higher – then you can’t think like
this.
Not all relevant ideas are equal.
Ideas which are more focused, more detailed, and better-supported are better for your TA
If you’re aiming for band seven plus, you should approach your task two essay in this
way: imagine you’re writing for someone who has the opposite opinion to you, and you
*really* want to convince them to change their mind.
We sometimes see questions about academic task one like: “How do I deal with a bar
“What do I do with a map question?”
Actually, you can approach all academic task one questions the same way.
Imagine you’re writing for someone who can’t see the chart, or the map, or whatever.
Now, imagine that this person is going to read what you’ve written, and try to draw
Can this imaginary person do it?
Can they recreate the chart, using only what you’ve written?
If they can, then you’ve written a high-scoring answer, at least for TA and probably C&C.
Write your answer with this idea in your head.
Your task one writing will improve immediately.
We’ve seen this work with many students!
IELTS students don’t generally have so many problems with task one, either academic or
And, the problems they do have are relatively easy to fix.
So yes, we only have one major task one tip.
But OK, here are two quick bonus tips for task one.
For task one general, the most common problem we see is tone – meaning how formal or informal
People either write in an inappropriate tone – in most cases, this means using language
which is too formal for the task – or, they mix formal and informal language in their
For high task one scores, your tone needs to be both appropriate and consistent.
For task one academic, learn some phrases to describe statistics and figures.
Many academic task ones are quite similar: you need to describe trends and data.
This requires a limited range of language, which you can – and should – prepare for.
For example, do you know any words which have the same meaning as ‘increase’?
What’s the difference between ‘rise’ and ‘raise’?
Finding the answers to these questions will help you to write a better task one answer