Below you can find different options to prepare for the IELTS exam.
Official British Council ELTS Website
The official British Council website www.takeielts.org offer sample papers, test day tips and a wealth of information on the IELTS examination including up to date information on where your IELTS score will be accepted.
Online IELTS Portal
You will be able to explore a great variety of practice materials. You will find:
sample papers for the General and Academic modules for Reading And Writing
tips and hints for the Speaking and Listening section
test day tips and hints
useful external websites to help you prepare for the IELTS
To enter to the IELTS Portal you must click on BC IELTS Portal and then LOG IN AS A GUEST.
Tips and hints
How to improve your IELTS performance.
Listening
Read instructions carefully, don't just glance at them. They are not always the same as in practise or previous tests.
Often the speaker will give you an answer and then correct themselves - watch out for this. It's a common trick.
Try and anticipate what the speaker will say. This requires concentration - easy in your own language, but more difficult in English.
Remember if you want a high score you should aim to get all questions in parts one and two correct. Don't make any careless mistakes in the easier sections.
Although there are not that many IELTS books on the market, other Cambridge exam preparation materials can provide valuable practise such as FCE and CAE preparation books.
Small errors can lead to low score such as spelling, omitting 's' or incomplete times.
Don't panic if you think the topic is too difficult or the speaker is too fast. Relax and tune in.
Read, write and listen at the same time. Tricky but practise.
Don't leave blanks, you might as well guess you won't be penalised.
Reading
Leave a question if you can't answer. To spend a long time on one answer is disastrous. Go back later if you have time and guess if you have too.
Don't panic if you don't know anything about the passage. All the answers are in the passage and you don't need any specialist knowledge.
Remember you have no extra time to transfer your answers, many candidates think because they have extra time in listening they are able to do this in reading too. You can't.
Before the exam read as widely as possible e.g. Newspapers, magazines, journals. Don't limit yourself to one type of text and read articles with an academic style where possible.
Look at ways paragraphs are organised.
Try and predict content of paragraph from the opening sentence.
Give a paragraph you read an imaginary heading.
Don't concentrate on words you don't know. It is fatal and wastes valuable time.
Careless mistakes cost many marks. Copy the answer correctly if it is in the passage.
Check spelling.
Only give one answer if that is all that's needed.
Be careful with singular/plural.
Writing
Highlight/circle key words.
Clearly divide paragraphs.
Don't repeat ideas in a different way.
Stick to the topic.
Careful with timing - don't rush Task 2, it's longer and carries more weight.
Paragraph simply with one idea in each paragraph.
Avoid informal language.
Learn to recognise how long 150 words is in your handwriting. You don't really have time to count.
Get used to always spending several minutes re-reading and correcting your essays.
Don't memorise model answers, they won't fit the question and you will make more careless mistakes.
Speaking
It tests your ability to communicate effectively not just your grammatical accuracy.
Don't learn chunks of answers. The examiner is trained to spot this and will change the question.
Develop your answers as much as possible.
Speak more than the examiner.
Ask for clarification if necessary.
Remember it is not a test of knowledge and there is no single answer, but ensure that you give your opinion. Don't worry if you feel it is not sophisticated enough.
The areas covered are fairly predictable and not infinite so practise at home recording ides onto a tape recorder.