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Simone Braverman

Simone Braverman is the founder of IELTS-Blog.com and the author of several renowned IELTS preparation books, including Ace the IELTS, Target Band 7, the High Scorer's Choice practice test series, and IELTS Success Formula. Since 2005, Simone has been committed to making IELTS preparation accessible and effective through her books and online resources. Her work has helped 100,000's of students worldwide achieve their target scores and live their dream lives. When Simone isn't working on her next IELTS book, video lesson, or coaching, she enjoys playing the guitar or rollerblading.

The IELTS Writing Task 2 explained

I said this many times and I will repeat it again, “To write a good IELTS essay, you need to get into your examiner’s head”. You’ve got to understand what makes you gain or lose marks, because once you do – you can’t go wrong. What I am about to reveal here can be found in the IELTS official site, but I am explaining it in simple English.

This is how they grade your essay: you receive points for Task Response, Coherence and Cohesion, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range and Accuracy. Looks heavy? Never mind, here comes the simple English version:

“Task Response” means that your essay shows that you considered and covered all the aspects of the topic. Let’s take this topic for example – “Internet: connecting or isolating people?”. Those who only chose to write about how Internet connects people – lose marks, those who only chose to write about how Internet isolates people – lose marks, those who compare and contrast both sides of the Internet and give arguments for and against – gain marks.

“Coherence and Cohesion” means how well you connected the paragraphs and sentences inside each paragraph. You see, all of your paragraphs need to be logically connected. For example, if paragraph 1 explains the advantages of the Internet, and paragraph 2 explains its disadvantages, then paragraph 1 should have a last sentence saying something like this: “In spite of Internet being a great help in communication, its drawbacks should not be overlooked”. This sentence creates the connection between 1st and 2nd paragraphs. If it weren’t there, the examiner could have thought that you jumped from advantages to disadvantages without a reason. The same rule applies to sentences inside the paragraph. Every sentence should lead to the next one.

“Lexical Resource” means vocabulary and different types of sentences, simple and complex. You should be able to use words and their synonyms.

“Grammatical Range and Accuracy” means spelling and grammar of sentences. You should be able to spell the words correctly, do not forget the articles “a/an” and “the”, the punctuation is also important, and so on – you get the picture, don’t you?

One more important thing to know: the four criteria are equally weighted. It means that if you forgot about the “Coherence and Cohesion” in your essay, you will lose 1/4 of your essay points.

It is quite possible that after reading this explanation you still couldn’t write a good IELTS essay. This is where “Ace The IELTS” book comes in. It has a full chapter dedicated to IELTS essays, which explains from A to Z the whole process of essay writing and makes it so easy that a child could do it.

There are topics of essays for you to practice on and our teachers are waiting to check your essays and make sure you are ready for the real IELTS test. And, of course, I am here to answer your questions, solve your problems and support you every step of the way, write me to simone[at]IELTS-Blog.com

IELTS results online

Time moves really slowly when you are waiting for your IELTS test results. Did you know that instead of looking for the postman every day, you can check the score online?

IELTS results become available online 13 days after the test, on this webpage – click to check IELTS results online.

All you need to do is visit the link above, and enter your family name, passport or other ID number, date of birth and your test date. The IELTS result, once ready, will remain available online for 28 days. If you try to log in and view an older IELTS score (over 1 month old) it may not be available.

Keep in mind that printouts / screenshots of your score taken from that website are generally not accepted by institutions, colleges and professional organizations – they require the actual Test Report Form that you will get from the IELTS test center in regular mail.

In addition to this global link, a similar service is available in the 3 countries below:

India Iran Nepal

And then there is this British Council site where you can check your results, but they say that it includes IELTS candidates from “selected test centres only” – anyway, try your luck!

Click here to check your IELTS results online

If you know of any other country where IELT results are available online, please let me know and I will add the link here for everyone to enjoy. Write to info@IELTS-Blog.com or just leave a comment on this post.

If you’ve checked your result and happy about it, you have a great chance of winning our monthly IELTS results competition – click here to enroll.

If you’ve checked your result and it’s not what you were hoping for, don’t give up. It is probably because you came across IELTS-Blog too late and didn’t make the most of our great exam tips. I suggest that you download the free IELTS preparation guide here, go through the sample essays here, learn from our high achievers and practice a lot. You would be pleasantly surprised by your next score!