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July 2009

An IELTS Speaking question: What do you do for the environment?

If your exam is tomorrow and they ask you: “How are you helping the environment?” – what do you say?

Well, here is an idea. It’s not my idea, nonetheless it’s an excellent one. Everybody, meet Wayne Kirk and he will teach you how to save the world.

Wayne Kirk lives in Chengdu, China and he is a man on a mission. He started a project that will help us all to stop the Global Warming by growing a plant that absorbs CO2 in unbelievable amounts.

The plant is Algae and it can convert 30 times more CO2 than any other plant. Growing it is easy and Wayne has a very simple explanation how to start on his website. Click here to quickly learn and start reducing your carbon footprint.

Why should you care? Well, if you decided to grow the plant, that’s wonderful and you will be doing a favor to the environment, your kids and your grand-kids, but even if you didn’t – this is something you can tell your examiner if they ask you “What have you done for the environment so far?”

So go ahead, check project’s website and enrich your IELTS “things to say” list!

IELTS exam in London, UK – July 2009 (Academic Module)

IELTS in London, UK was very interesting. Today I’ve received an update from S who took Academic Module and here’s what he says:

In preparation I used the IELTS-Blog and your book, Target Band 7, and nothing else to practice for my test. And I think it went OK.

Listening test

Section 1: A lady was calling a person working at an activity center. She was doing some research on a trip she was going on with some colleagues. It was about hiking, camping, equipment, price, what skills they would learn.
Questions: Filling in gaps.

It wasn’t hard but it started quite suddenly, so I didn’t catch the first word for the gap.

Section 2: A radio interview about a tree-festival, why it is important to plant trees and also some questions about some other festivals.
Questions: Filling in gaps, multiple choice.

Section 3: A guy sees his lecturer because he has hurt his hand and needs to rearrange his plans for test, assignments and so on.
Questions: Filling in gaps.

Section 4: About a psychology study on how the old style lectures should be superseded by new types where students are more actively involved and have more breaks.
Questions: Sentence completion, fill in gaps.

Reading test

Passage 1: about Jupiter and some comet, there were many numbers and details about chemicals and so on.
Questions: Labeling of a figure, filling in gaps, multiple choice questions.

Passage 2: Children’s diet and how it was influenced by campaigns and ads. It was a bit confusing because it was like a review study with a lot of different opinions and research results that were mentioned were contradicting one another.
Questions: Filling in gaps, multiple choice questions.

Passage 3: A very difficult text about psychology, talent and how it can be defined, how companies can recruit the best staff. Questions: Headings to paragraphs matching, which was very hard.

Overall, in the reading test I didn’t manage to spend least time on the first, a bit more on the second and most on the last. I would strongly advice others to do that, because 20 minutes for the last were not enough.

Writing test

Writing Task1 (report)
There was a bar chart showing how five different age groups used the internet daily over 4 years. That means every age group had 4 different percentages: quite a lot of information to try to group together, but fairly easy.

Writing Task 2 (essay)
Many countries face violent football supporters. Write from your own experience and knowledge about the reasons and how this problem could be solved.

I hated this topic since I have no interest in football, but used your template with introduction, reason 1 and so on, and managed to write two pages.

Speaking test

Interview
– Where are you from?
– Do you work or study?
– Do you intend to do more courses?
– Why do you think people have paintings in their homes?
– Have you got paintings?
– Did you have art classes as a child?
– Do you think it is important for children to have art classes?

Cue card
– Talk about a film you saw recently at home or cinema, you should say:
– What kind of film was it?
– When , where, who did you see it with?
– What was it about?
– Why did you like it?

Discussion
– What do you think is the difference between seeing a movie at home or on DVD?
– What do you prefer and why?
– What does a movie need to be good?
– Do you prefer dubbed or subtitled films, why?
– What actors do you like?
– About vegetables:
– Do you think they are important to get?
– Can you get fresh vegetables in your country?

Overall, I think the oral test was easy, but as has been noted on the blog, it feels a bit awkward in the beginning because it’s a lot of questions and you try to answer short but not staccato.

Practicing with a watch as you recommend helped me sense when to stop talking in order for the interviewer to move on.

Thank you and good luck to everyone,
– S.