IELTS Writing Tips
Work
with a teacher. Write several sample essays and have them corrected by a
teacher. You cannot prepare for the writing section of the IELTS alone, as you
have no way of receiving feedback on your errors. If you are short on money, at
least invest in a teacher or class to prepare for the writing and speaking
sections of the IELTS, and then do the listening and reading sections on your
own by working with a good preparatory IELTS guidebook.
Read
the questions very carefully. Often the question will ask you to do three or
four different things, aside from the main question. Jot them down and make
sure you address all of them in your answer. The
IELTS examiner will be checking for this.
Practice
writing tasks within the given time limits. It really doesn't matter if you
can write a beautiful answer in two hours. Always recreate the conditions of
the exam as closely as possible, when doing any kind of practice exercises.
Plan
before you write. Even though you feel under pressure for time, spend the first
few minutes planning your writing. Decide what you're going to say and how
you'll expand on it. When you know what
to write, you can concentrate on how
to write it best. Experiment with the great variety of outlining and
mind-mapping techniques to help you sketch out a plan quickly.
Write
in an organized way. When you've planned in advance, you'll
end up with a more organized, logical piece of writing, which will earn you
higher marks. There are many ways to be organized – linear, circular, etc. –
but in the end the final product must be cohesive.
Stay
on topic. You will be penalized if you stray off topic. This is where
the initial few minutes of planning can help you a great deal.
Divide
your writing into paragraphs. It is confusing to be faced with a block of
writing, with no divisions. You wouldn't expect to read a magazine article or
book like this. Always divide your writing into paragraphs.
Write
clearly. This is not the time or place to experiment with new
vocabulary or idioms. Use simple, clear English to get your ideas across in a
powerful way.
Write
legibly. Though marks are not granted or taken away for poor or messy
writing, the examiner should be able to read what you have written without
undue difficulty.
Spell
correctly. Yes, this does affect your score so avoid careless mistakes. A
careless mistake is when you have spelt the same word in various ways in the
same piece of writing or when you misspell a word which is already given in the
exam topic and all you have to do is copy it correctly. That's not okay. Watch
for this when you're practicing and resolve to overcome it.
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