Free Ielts Lesson - The Academic Writing Test - Task 1: Graph
Free Ielts Lesson - The Academic Writing Test - Task 1: Graph
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The Task
Basically the IELTS Academic Task 1 Writing is an information transfer task related to the factual content of an input text(s), graph(s), table(s) or diagram(s). It can be combinations of these inputs. Usually you will have to describe the information given in 1, 2 or 3 three inputs but sometimes you have will have to describe a process shown in a diagram.
Lexical Resource This area looks at the your choice of words. The marker will look at whether the right words are used and whether they are used at the right time in the right place and in the right way. To get a good mark here, the word choice should not only be accurate but wide ranging, natural and sophisticated. Grammatical Range and Accuracy Here the examiner will mark your appropriate, flexible and accurate use of grammatical structures. Many people are worried about their grammar but, as you can see, grammar is only one section of four used to grade your writing. IELTS is much more interested in communication rather than grammatical accuracy. It is, of course, still part of the marking scheme and important as such.
The titles of the graph(s) The date of the graph(s) The scale (see the paragraph above)
You might not have all this information but you should report what you do have. So, for example, your beginning could look like this: In this report I am going to describe 2 graphs. The first one is a bar chart showing the relationship between age and crime and the second is a pie chart showing the types of reported crime in the UK in 2002. (This example gives an introduction to the Academic Writing Task 1 in Test 3 from ieltshelpnow.com.)
bars and their values. When describing a bar chart you first have to decide in what order to describe the bars, highest value to lowest value or lowest value to highest value. It may be a mixture of this. If there are very many bars, you can sometimes group together for description 1 or 2 or 3 bars which have similar or the same values. If there are very many and you can't group them, then just describe the ones that are the most significant.
Verbs Rise (to) Increase (to) Go up to Grow (to) Climb (to) Boom
Peak (at)
(reach) a peak (at) a fall (of) a decline (of) a decrease (of) a dip (of) a drop (of) a reduction (of) A slump a leveling out no change
Fall (to) Decline (to) Decrease (to) Dip (to) Drop (to) Go down (to) Reduce (to)
Level out No change Remain stable (at) Remain steady (at) Stay (at) Stay constant (at) Maintain the same level Adjectives Dramatic Sharp Huge Enormous Steep Substantial Considerable Significant Marked Moderate Slight
Adverbs dramatically sharply hugely enormously steeply substantially considerably significantly markedly moderately slightly
Small Minimal
minimally
DON'T copy any part of the question in your answer. This is not your own work and therefore will be disregarded by the examiner and
deducted from the word count. You can use individual words but be careful of using long "chunks" of the question text. Don't repeat yourself or the same ideas. This gives a bad impression and the examiner realises that it isn't adding to the content of your report. If you are weak at English grammar, try to use short sentences. This allows you to control the grammar and the meaning of your writing much more easily and contributes to a better cohesion and coherence mark. It's much easier to make things clear in a foreign language if you keep your sentences short! Think about the tenses of your verbs. If you're writing about something that happened in the past, your verbs will need to be in the past tenses. If you're describing the future, you will need to use the future tenses. If it's a habitual action, you'll need the present simple tense and so on. If you have time, a quick check of your verbs at the end of the exam can help you find errors. For describing graphs you will probably need past tenses whereas, for describing a process, you will probably need the present simple. Think about the verbs while practising and then it will become easier when you do the exam. As I just said, if you have finished the exam with time to spare, DON'T just sit there!! Check what you have done. If you have time after the check, check again. And so on.... Don't be irrelevant. Although you can use your imagination to expand on your answer, if any part of your report is totally unrelated to the question and put in to just put up the word count, then the examiner will not take it into account and deduct it from the word count. If you want to improve, there's no secret. Practice. Practice. Practice. You won't get better sitting and doing nothing. Even good English users need practice with IELTS practice tests. It could make all the difference between your getting the band that you need, and getting half a band less than you need and having to do the exam again.
Finally, there are no correct answers or methods. Here I've given you some ideas to guide you and hopefully to help you but the questions can be answered well in different ways. Good luck with the IELTS Academic Task 1 Writing. I hope that this free tutorial has helped you! Below are links to the other free IELTS academic tutorials. We strongly recommend that you practice for the tests with good IELTS practice tests. Of course, we would like you to use ours as we believe ours are excellent and the cheapest on the market, but any good IELTS practice tests will do. The Free IELTS Academic Listening Test Lesson The Free IELTS Academic Reading Test Lesson The Free IELTS Academic Speaking Test Lesson
The Free IELTS Academic Test Lessons o The Free Academic Listening Test Lesson o The Academic Reading Test Lesson o The Free Academic Speaking Test Lesson o The Academic Writing Test - Task 1 Lesson o The Academic Writing Test - Task 2 Tutorial The Free IELTS General Training Test Lessons
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