Mark IELTS/Business
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IELTS..... which section do you find the most difficult?

Hi there,

I am just wanting to ask which part of IELTS do you as IELTS students find the most difficult to learn or grasp? Speaking, reading, writing, or listening? 90% of my students choose to learn IELTS speaking with me but I am not sure whether this is because it is the easiest to learn via Skype or whether they genuinely struggle with this part of the exam. If you could give me some insight then I may be able to improve the lesson content that I currently offer. Thanks so much....

Mark.

17 ม.ค. 2018 เวลา 8:39
ความคิดเห็น · 5
2
Hello Mr Roy. I'm an IELTS student in IRAN and like your student the hardest part for me is speaking. It takes a long time that i can fluent in this part. I think it's reason is that in non English language countries like IRAN teaching systems doesn't work good and it's not enough for reading candidates to attend in the exam.
18 มกราคม 2018
1
If you are looking forward to reaching for Chinese market (that is an amazingly big market) , you might have to learn a little bit Chinese. (my personal opinion) . There is definitely a great demand for IELTs in China. 
20 มกราคม 2018
1

@Mark Roy: 

In general, younger learners are more likely to struggle and strand in speaking and writing (productive side) while older learners would be liable being stalled in listening and reading (receptive side). Surely that is a very rough rule of thumb. 

@ Yi Zhang
I met a couple of IELTs candidates who did not get good mark in speaking are actually fluent in conversation. I guess that is because in the test the candidates have to use well-structured compound sentences to describe an abstract, whereas that is seldom occurring in everyday conversation with your neighbors. That is why many candidates think speaking module in the test is much more difficult than other skills. 

17 มกราคม 2018
1
Hi, IELTS, normally non-native English speaking teacher have methods to teach and help students to recognised language patterns within the examination materials to help students achieve a high score. 

However, this is helpless regarding the writing, especially, speaking section. When we first take IELTS and TOEFL exam , we are often in a relatively early stage of language learning. Even after all those years,I still find it is against humanity to write a few hundred words essay about a normally surprising topic within a less than an hour of time.  Misspelling in writing and incomplete sentences ( other grammar mistakes once before) are almost inevitable.  The biggest problem is that we are not always able to immediately come out with something to write about, no mention to intentional produce a sentence with advanced English grammar for the score.

As for speaking, the way of speaking in our daily life will not satisfy the requirement of those exams for a high score. Sometimes we lack necessary understanding of the background contents of the question, more often it is the inarticulate use of words and funny pronunciation. We might able to speak English, but not necessary all our speaking are coherent, even with our first language. 
17 มกราคม 2018

@Jack

Yes, I agree. It is the same case with me. After a few years of effort, many of us speak fluently in the most of the everyday life scenarios.  However, those scenarios do not necessarily apply to the language exams. Instead, questions in IELTS speaking task are those we normally would not think about in depth. The simplest way to test is to answer those questions in our first language. To be honest, I do not think I can answer some of those tricky questions, like what is my opinion on rock music, regardless in Chinese or English, especially we have to elaborate our answers within such short period.

27 มกราคม 2018