IELTS
TEST MODULES
Sections that you must attend while taking IELTS
Test
1. LISTENING
Duration and format
The Listening Module takes around 30 minutes.
There are 40 questions. There are four sections. The
Listening Module is recorded on a CD and is played
ONCE only. During the test, time is given for
candidates to read the questions and write down and
check their answers. Answers are written on the
Question Paper as candidates listen. When the
recording ends ten minutes are allowed for candidates
to transfer their answers to an Answer Sheet.
Task types
The first two sections are concerned with social
needs. There is a conversation between two speakers
and then a monologue. For example – a conversation
about travel arrangements or decisions on a night out,
and a speech about student services on a University
campus or arrangements for meals during a conference.
The final two sections are concerned with situations
related more closely to educational or training
contexts. There is a conversation between up to four
people and then a further monologue. For example – a
conversation between a tutor and a student about an
assignment or between three students planning a
research project, and a lecture or talk of general
academic interest. A range of English accents and
dialects are used in the recordings which reflects the
international usage of IELTS exam. A variety of questions
are used, chosen from the following types:
»
multiple choice
»
short-answer questions
»
sentence completion
»
notes/summary/diagram/flow-chart/ table completion
» labeling
a diagram which has numbered parts
» classification
» matching
Marking and Assessment
One mark is awarded for each correct answer in the
40 item test.
A confidential band score conversion table is produced
for each
version of the Listening Module, which translates
scores out of
40 into the IELTS 9-band scale. Scores are reported as
a whole
band or a half band. Care should be taken when writing
answers on the Answer Sheet as poor spelling and
grammar are penalized.
»
Sample Questions for
Listening Module
2. READING
Duration and format
The Reading Module takes 60
minutes. There are 40 questions, based on three
reading passages with a total of 2,000 to 2,750 words.
Texts and questions appear on a Question Paper which
candidates can write on but not remove from the test
room. All answers must be entered on an Answer Sheet
during the 60-minute test. No extra time is allowed to
transfer answers.
Task Types
A variety of questions are used, chosen from the
following types:
» multiple choice
» short-answer questions
» sentence completion
»
notes/summary/diagram/flow-chart/ table completion
» choosing from a ‘heading bank’ for
identified paragraphs/
sections of the text
» identification of writer’s views/claims
» yes, no or not given
» identification of information in the text
» yes, no or not
» given/true, false or not given
» classification
» matching lists/phrases
Academic Reading
Texts are taken from magazines, journals, books,
and newspapers. Texts have been written for a
non-specialist
audience. All the topics are of general interest. They
deal with issues which are interesting, recognizably
appropriate and accessible to candidates entering
undergraduate or postgraduate courses or seeking
professional registration. At least one text contains
detailed logical argument. One text may contain
non-verbal materials such as diagrams, graphs or
illustrations. If texts contain technical terms then a
simple glossary is provided.
Marking and assessment
One mark is awarded for each correct answer in the 40
item test. A Band Score conversion table is produced
for each version of the Reading Module which
translates scores out of 40 into the IELTS 9-band
scale. Scores are reported as a whole band or a half
band. Care should be taken when writing answers on the
Answer Sheet as poor spelling and grammar are
penalized.
»
Sample Questions for Reading Module
3 .
WRITING
Duration and format
The Writing Module takes 60 minutes. There are two
tasks to complete. It is suggested that about 20
minutes is spent on Task 1 which requires candidates
to write at least 150 words. Task 2 requires at least
250 words and should take about 40 minutes. Candidates
may write on the Question Paper but this cannot be
taken from the test room and will not be seen by the
examiner. Answers must be given on the Answer Sheet
and must be written in full. Notes are not acceptable
as answers.
Task Types
Academic Writing
In Task 1 candidates are asked to describe some
information (graph/table/chart/diagram), and to
present the description in their own words. Depending
on the type of input and the task suggested,
candidates are assessed on their ability to:
» organize, present and possibly compare data
» describe the stages of a process or
procedure
» describe an object or event or sequence of
events
» explain how something works
In Task 2 candidates are presented
with a point of view or argument or problem.
Candidates are assessed on their ability to: » present the solution to a problem
» present and justify an opinion
» compare and contrast evidence, opinions and
implications
» evaluate and challenge ideas, evidence or
an argument
The issues raised are of general
interest to, suitable for and easily understood by
candidates entering undergraduate or postgraduate
studies or seeking professional registration.
WRITING TASK 1
Duration and format
The Writing Module takes 60 minutes. There are two
tasks to complete. It is suggested that about 20
minutes is spent on Task 1 which requires candidates
to write at least 150 words. Task 2 requires at least
250 words and should take about 40 minutes. Candidates
may write on the Question Paper but this cannot be
taken from the test room and will not be seen by the
examiner. Answers must be given on the Answer Sheet
and must be written in full. Notes are not acceptable
as answers.
Task Types
Academic Writing
In Task 1 candidates are asked to describe some
information (graph/table/chart/diagram), and to
present the description in their own words. Depending
on the type of input and the task suggested,
candidates are assessed on their ability to:
»
organize, present and possibly
compare data
»
describe the stages of a process
or procedure
»
describe an object or event or
sequence of events
»
explain how something works
In Task 2 candidates are presented
with a point of view or
argument or problem. Candidates are assessed on their
ability to:
»
present the solution to a problem
»
present and justify an opinion
»
compare and contrast evidence,
opinions and implications
»
evaluate and challenge ideas,
evidence or an argument
The issues raised are of general
interest to, suitable for and easily understood by
candidates entering undergraduate or postgraduate
studies or seeking professional registration.
Marking and Assessment
Each task is assessed independently. The assessment of
Task 2 carries more weight in marking than Task 1.
Writing scripts are marked by trained and certificated
IELTS examiners. IELTS examiners all hold relevant
teaching qualifications and are recruited as examiners
by the test centers and approved by British Council or
IDP:IELTS Australia. Scores are currently reported as
whole bands. Detailed performance descriptors have
been developed which describe written performance at
the 9 IELTS bands. These descriptors are confidential
and apply to both the Academic and General Training
Modules.
Task 1 scripts are assessed on the following criteria:
»
Task Achievement
»
Coherence and Cohesion
»
Lexical Resource
»
Grammatical Range and Accuracy
Task 2 scripts are assessed on the following criteria:
»
Task Response
»
Coherence and Cohesion
»
Lexical Resource
»
Grammatical Range and Accuracy
Scripts under the required minimum
word limit will be penalized.
Task 1
Task Achievement
This criterion assesses how appropriately, accurately
and relevantly the response fulfils the requirements
set out in the task, using the minimum of 150 words.
Academic Writing Task 1 is a writing task which has a
defined input and a largely predictable output. It is
basically an information-transfer task which relates
narrowly to the factual content of an input diagram
and not to speculated explanations that lie outside
the given data.
Coherence and Cohesion
This criterion is concerned with the overall
clarity and fluency of the message: how the response
organizes and links information, ideas and language.
Coherence refers to the linking of ideas through
logical sequencing. Cohesion refers to the varied and
appropriate use of cohesive devices (for example,
logical connectors, pronouns and conjunctions) to
assist in making the conceptual and referential
relationships between and within sentences clear.
Lexical Resource
This criterion refers to the range of vocabulary
the candidate has
used and the accuracy and appropriacy of that use in
terms of the specific task.
Grammatical Range and Accuracy
This criterion refers to the range and accurate
use of the candidate’s grammatical resource as
manifested in the candidate’s writing at the sentence
level.
Task 2
Task Response
In both Academic and General
Training Modules Task 2 requires the candidates to
formulate and develop a position in relation to a
given prompt in the form of a question or statement.
Ideas should be supported by evidence, and examples
may be drawn from the candidates’ own experience.
Responses must be at
least 250 words in length.
»
Sample Questions for Writing
Module
4. SPEAKING
Duration and format
The Speaking Module takes between 11 and 14
minutes and consists of an oral interview between the
candidate and an examiner. All interviews are
recorded. The overall structure of the test is
summarized below.
Task Types
There are three main parts. Each part fulfils a
specific function in terms of interaction pattern,
task input and candidate output. In Part 1 candidates
answer general questions about themselves, their
homes/families, their jobs/studies, their interests,
and a range of familiar topic areas. This part lasts
between four and five minutes. In Part 2 the candidate
is given a verbal prompt on a card and is asked to
talk on a particular topic. The candidate has one
minute to prepare before speaking at length, for
between one and two minutes. The examiner then asks
one or two rounding-off questions. In Part 3 the
examiner and candidate engage in a discussion of more
abstract issues and concepts which are thematically
linked to the topic prompt in Part 2. The discussion
lasts between four and five minutes. The Speaking
Module assesses how effectively candidates can
communicate in English.
Part Nature of interaction Timing
Part 1
Introduction Examiner introduces him/herself and
interview and confirms candidate’s identity. (4/5minutes
) Examiner interviews candidate using verbal
questions selected from familiar topic frames.
Part 2
Individual long Examiner asks candidate to speak
3/4 turn for 1/2 minutes on a particular minutes topic
based on written input in the (incl. 1 form of a
candidate task card and minute content-focused
prompts. Examiner preparation asks one or two
questions to round- time) off the long turn.
Part 3
Two-way Examiner invites candidate to 4/5
discussion participate in discussion of a more minutes
abstract nature, based on verbal questions
thematically linked to Part 2 topic. Research has
shown that the speech functions which occur regularly
in a candidate’s output during the Speaking Test are:
»
Providing personal
information Expressing a preference
»
Providing non-personal
information Comparing
»
Expressing opinions
Summarizing
»
Explaining Conversation
repair
»
Suggesting Contrasting
»
Justifying opinions Narrating
and paraphrasing
»
Speculating Analyzing
Other speech functions may emerge
during the test, but they are
not forced by the test structure.
Marking and assessment
IELTS examiners all hold relevant teaching
qualifications and are
recruited as examiners by the test centres and
approved by British Council or IDP:IELTS Australia.
Detailed performance descriptors have been developed
which describe spoken performance at the nine IELTS
bands, based on the following criteria. Scores are
reported as whole bands only.
Fluency and Coherence
refers to the ability to talk with normal levels of
continuity, rate and effort and to link ideas and
language together to form coherent, connected speech.
The key indicators of fluency are speech rate and
speech continuity. The key indicators of coherence are
logical sequencing of sentences, clear marking of
stages in a discussion, narration or argument, and the
use of cohesive devices (e.g. connectors, pronouns and
conjunctions) within and between sentences.
Lexical Resource
refers to the range of
vocabulary the candidate can use and the precision
with which meanings and attitudes can be expressed.
The key indicators are the variety of words used, the
adequacy and appropriacy of the words used and the
ability to circumlocute (get round a vocabulary gap by
using other words) with or without noticeable
hesitation.
Grammatical Range and Accuracy
refers
to the range and the accurate and appropriate use of
the candidate’s grammatical resource. The key
indicators of grammatical range are the length and
complexity of the spoken sentences, the appropriate
use of subordinate clauses, and the range of sentence
structures, especially to move elements around for
information focus. The key indicators of grammatical
accuracy are the number of grammatical errors in a
given amount of speech and the communicative effect of
error.
Pronunciation
refers to the ability to produce comprehensible
speech to fulfill the speaking test requirements. The
key indicators will be the amount of strain caused to
the listener, the amount of the speech which is
unintelligible and the noticeability of L1 influence.
»
Sample Questions for Speaking
Module
See
Also..............................................................................................
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