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IELTS Preparation tips

The best ways to study for the four IELTS sub-tests: Listening, Reading, Writing and Speaking

IELTS score – the strategic plan

Now, let’s talk about the most important thing – your IELTS score.

After studying for a while you begin to understand what your strong and weak sides are. For example you do the Reading very well and the Listening test makes you cry. This information is very important because it reveals what you need to focus on.

If you know that you need a total average score of 6, you can reach it by getting 5, 6, 6, 7 or 6, 6, 6, 6, or 5, 5, 7, 7 – in a number of ways. You should decide which way is the best for you, thinking of your current level of English. If you know that the Listening test is a problem for you, but in Reading you are really good, then aim for 5 in Listening and for 7 in Reading.

When I say “aim”, I mean that you need to measure yourself when you are practicing. How do you do that? Here is a table you can use to convert the number of correct answers into an IELTS band score, which will give you the approximate band score (actually, for each IELTS test this table is a bit different because of varying level of questions’ difficulty.)

General Training Listening

Correct Answers ……… IELTS Band Score
10-15………………………………..(4)
16-22………………………………..(5)
23-29………………………………..(6)
30-34………………………………..(7)
35-38………………………………..(8)
39-40………………………………..(9)

General Training Reading

Correct Answers ……… IELTS Band Score
15-22………………………………..(4)
23-29………………………………..(5)
30-33………………………………..(6)
34-36………………………………..(7)
37-38………………………………..(8)
39-40………………………………..(9)

Let’s say you have finished the Listening test with 28 correct answers out of 40. It places you at band 6, which means that to reach 7 you need to improve your Listening skills.

Well, what are you waiting for? Start working 🙂 !

Listening: The right way to answer

Continuing the previous post, here comes

Listening Tip # 4 – Answer as you listen

What I mean here is that you need to listen and write the answer at the same time.
Make no mistake – it is not a very natural thing for you, so you have to practice a lot doing this.

The reason you have to “answer as you listen” is that you immediately forget the sentences after you have heard them. This is what the stress, listening to foreign language and constant flow of information do – they make you forget. After hearing the third sentence you won’t be able to repeat the first. It means that when any part of the Listening test is over – you won’t be able to remember any of the answers.

So write them as you hear them, leave nothing for later.