Task1 Tips Academic Ielts
Task1 Tips Academic Ielts
Task1 Tips Academic Ielts
IELTS score
Selecting information
In completing this task, it is important that you fully describe all of the
graphic information given. However, this does not mean that you
should note every detail. In most cases there will be too much
information for you to mention each figure. You will therefore need to
summarise the graph in meaningful segments. In other words, you
will describe the significant trends in your report.
Report structure
As in the line graphs task, your report should be structured simply
with an introduction, body and conclusion. Tenses should be used
appropriately.
Use two standard opening sentences to introduce the graph or
graphs and your report. These opening sentences should make up
the first paragraph. Sentence one should define what the graph is
about, that is the date, location, what is being described in the graphs
etc. For example:
The pie charts compare the highest level of education achieved by
women in Someland across two years, 1945 and 1995.
Notice that in the single line graph we said that the graph shows' but
with two charts we can more accurately say the pie charts compare.
Note the tense used. Even though it describes information from the
past, the graph shows the information in the present time.
Notice that the sample opening sentence does not simply copy the
words used on the graphic material. Copied sentences will not be
assessed by the examiner and so you waste your time including
them.
Sentence two (and possibly three) might sum up the overall trend.
For example:
It can be clearly seen that women received a much higher level of
education in Someland in 1995 than they did in 1945.
Notice the Simple Past tense is used. Here we are talking about what
happened in the past.
The body of the report will describe the chart or charts in detail. You
will need to decide on the most clear and logical order to present the
material. In this case it might be best to work through the charts one
by one.
Ideally your report should end with one or two sentences which
summarise your report or draw a relevant conclusion.
Make sure that you are confident with comparatives and superlatives
used to compare and contrast and the language used to describe pie
charts.
IELTS Writing - Academic Task 1 -
Types of Charts
In the IELTS Academic Task 1, you must be able to identify,
understand and describe various types of graphic information.
This is considered an important academic skill, because it shows
you can intelligently and clearly interpret and describe data
presented in charts, tables, graphs and diagrams. If you have
written your answer very well, even someone who cannot see
the graphic should be able to understand what happened.
5 STEPS TO MASTERING ACADEMIC TASK 1
To prepare yourself to complete Task 1, follow the five steps
below:
Learn to recognize and identify different graphic forms, such as
line graphs, bar charts, pie charts, etc.
Know what key information, comparisons and trends to look out
for.
Practice using the specific vocabulary required to describe those
trends.
Learn how to follow a plan to start, complete and finish your
answer. Use sample Task 1 questions, included on this website,
to practice writing out a full response. At first, do not time
yourself. Later, once you've got the hang of it, time yourself and
make sure you finish in 20 minutes.
Know what NOT to include in your response.
By following the steps above, you will be prepared and
confident, no matter what type of question appears in Task 1 of
your actual IELTS exam.
Introduction of Task 1
Types of graphs
Bar - Pillar graph
Line - Linear or Poly line graph
Pie chart - Circular graph
Table - Tabular/Column chart
Picture Pictorial
Process Flow chart
Map Diagram
Conclusion expressions
To encapsulate, it is abundantly clear that
In encapsulation , it is categorical that
The gist is that , it could be that
At the eleventh hour,
The essence is that
The sum and substance of the matter is that
In compendium,
To wrap up
In a long run
Summing up
To finish off
At last to recapitulate
To curtail/to nut shell
Decrease
Verb form noun form
Decline a fall
Plummet a reduction
Plunge a decline
Drop a drop
Reduce a downward trend/
Fall down tendency
Dwindle diminution
Shrink contraction
Slump Depletion
Diminish deterioration
Go down
Go southwards/downwards
Mitigate
Lessen
Prepositions
Between 1995 and 2000
From 1950 to 2000
Sales rose from 200 to 250
Sales fell to 150 in march
Sales fell by 50 %
There are two main grammatical structures we can use to describe trends.
Example:
Example:
When describing any of the charts in IELTS writing task 1, you might have
to describe increases and decreases. There are three main ways you can
describe increases and decreases.
Example:
3. Using fractions
Example:
The price of oil halved in less than a year.
The price of oil have halved since July.
By July, the price of oil has halved.
Making Comparisons
IELTS writing task 1 will often require you to make comparisons between
data sources, groups and times. Here are five grammatical structures you
can use to make comparisons.
Example:
Example:
Example:
Taxis were more popular than public transport.
Example:
Example:
.Tenses
Using the appropriate tenses in IELTS writing task 1 is essential if you
want to get a high band score.
The key is to look at the title of the chart and the information contained
on both axes to establish what time frame is used. This will help you
establish what tense you should use.
Example:
If the time is one point in the past, for example January 1990,
then we should use the past tense.
If it has projections for the future, for example 2045, we
use future tenses.
It there is no time, we use present simple.
1. Present Perfect:
In writing task 1, we use this tense to talk about changes in data that
have happened over a period of time.
Example
The price of oil has fallen by $5 a barrel every week since July.
We use this tense to show that something started in the past and has
continued up until now.
Example
Oil prices have been decreasing since July.
3. Future Perfect
Example
4. Past Simple
Use this tense to talk about an action that started and finished at a
specific time in the past.
Example
The price of oil fell from $150 in Jan 2014 to $50 in Jan 2016.
Is expected to
Is projected to
Is anticipated to
SENTENCE STRUCTURE :-
EXAMPLES-
3.The odds are that the sale will stand at 40% in 2025 as against 70%in
2030.
4. The sale is anticipated to stand at 40% in 2025 vis-a vis 70%in 2030.
EXAMPLE ;-
Fractions
Proportions
NUMBERS/PERCENTAGES
1) One third = 1/3 = 33.33%
It can be seen from the graph that only 25% of women in VN were
single.
It can be seen from the graph that only A QUARTER of women in VN
were single.
Adverbs:
1) just under
Number: 9% Just under a tenth of
2) just over
3) approximately
4) nearly
5) almost
1990 1995
1200 1800
You could describe the above table using numbers,
fractions orpercentages:
The number went up by 600, from 1200 to 800. (Number)
The number went up by half, from 1200 to 1800. (Fraction)
The figure went up by 50%, from 1200 to 1800. Percentage)
The figure went up 50%, to 1800. (Percentage)
Use Fractions:
Between 1992 and 1994, the figure fell by one-fifth.
Between 1994 and 1996, the number dropped by a half.
The figure in 1998 was one-tenth the 1992 total.
.
Variation in sentences
Similar words meaning to become greater in
number; to go up:
to rise (v)
Prices rose from $10 to $15 within 3 months. Prices rose by 50%.
Note: Dont confuse the verbs rise (to become more)
with raise (to make something rise). Ex. School fees are set to
rise. Our school has raised their fees by 5%.
As a noun: There was a rise of %5 in school fees.
to increase (v)
Birth rates in New Zealand stood at 20,000 at the start of this
period and increased to a peak of 66,000 in 1961.
You can use increase from (a number) to (a number); increase by (
number/percentage), increase in value/price.
Note: Dont use increase to refer to the level or standard of
something.
As a noun: There was an increase in house prices for the first 5
years.
to grow (v)
The population of internet users grew the fastest in Canada during
this period.
As a noun: Canada experienced the fastest growth in Internet
usage.
to soar (v) to fly upward, like a bird; rise to great heights
While sales of Product B remained steady, sales of Product
A soared during the fourth quarter.
to rocket/to skyrocket (v) similar to soar to fly upward to great
heights
By 2030 the elderly Japanese population is predicted to
skyrocket 150% within one or two years. OR By 2030 the
proportion of elderly Japanese is predicted to skyrocket to 25%of
the population within one or two years.
to spike (v) to increase quickly then fall down again
On the other hand, house prices spiked in the first two months after
the recession.
As a noun: There was a spike in house prices in the first two
months after the recession.
to jump (v)
New gym memberships jumped 10% immediately after the
Christmas holiday period.
As a noun: There was a 10% jump in new gym memberships
immediately after the Christmas holiday period.
to hit/reach a peak (v) a peak is the highest point/level
From there, the audience level continues to rise sharply, reaching a
peak of 45% of the population between 6 and 10 pm, also aptly
known as prime time.
to reach a high (v) similar to reach a peak
Conversely, audience levels for radio reaches a high in the
morning by 9 am.
an upward trend (n)
The graph shows an upward trend in household access to modern
technology in the UK from 1996 to 2003.
to double (v) increase 2 times
to triple (v) increase 3 times
House prices nearly doubled in that time period.
As you probably know, in Writing Task 1, you will most likely be given a
graph, table or chart to write about.
Basically, you need to be able to choose the most important numbers you
see and compare them in your response.
Below are three high level sentence structures, and examples, for both of
these question types.
In time graphs you use time vocab to describe change: rose, fell, declined, shot up,
increased, remained steady, etc.
In comparison graphs you compare: twice as much as, more than, less than, the
same amount, both X and Y have the same figure, etc.
Time Graphs
The main trend with air is that it started late, in the 1960s, but it has shot up to become by
far the biggest carrier of passengers.
Comparison Graph
Here is a comparison graph.
You have to compare the amount of water used for domestic, agricultural
and industrial purposes.
There are two ways to write about this graph:
by country (make groups, e.g. Saudi Arabia and Oman, which have
mainly agricultural use, then Bahrain and Kuwait which have mainly
domestic use, etc)
by use (Agriculture, then Domestic, then Industrial.)
If you decide to write by describing use, you could start with Agriculture
because it is the biggest user. Group together Saudi Arabia and Oman as
the top users, and then group UAE and Qatar as the middle group of users,
using 60% of water for agriculture. Finally mention Bahrain and Kuwait.
Your second paragraph should be about Domestic use, the use of water in
the home, because it is the second biggest use. Start with Kuwait and
Bahrain (grouped together) (more than 50%) and then write about
Qatar and the UAE.
COMPLEX SENTENCES
Below are useful high level sentence structures which you can
utilize to get a higher score for IELTS Writing Task 1.
The figure for factories in Japan hit a free fall to 1,000 in 2o15,
after undergoing an increase to 120,000 in 2010.
5. In comparison to/with X, which verb, Y verb.
Prepositions
Trend vocabulary
up (2009 to 2010),
down (2008 to 2009),
up and down (between 2006 and 2009)
no change (2006 and 2007)
the top (2010)
The trend vocabulary I am going to suggest may seem very basic. It does, however,
allow you to say the same thing in up to 6 different ways.Thats good.
Tip: if you find yourself repeating a word, try changing the form of it from a verb to a
noun
You should also note that, even with this basic language, there are a variety of
grammar problems that cause many candidates problems. Thats bad.
Up variations
Down variations
Up and down
Sometimes you need to describe a graph that goes up and then down. Here we
have fewer options.
No change
Top
LINE GRAPH
1. The provided diagram shows data on employment categories in energy producing sectors in
Europe starting from 1925 and till 1985.
NOTE 1. For a single graph use 's' after the verb, like - gives data on, shows/ presents etc.
However, if there are multiple graphs, DO NOT use 's' after the verb.
2. If there are multiple graphs and each one presents different type of data, use can write which
graph presents what type of data and use 'while' to show a connection. For example -'The given bar
graph shows the amount spent on fast food items in 2009 in the UK while the pie chart presents a
comparison of people's ages who spent more on fast food.
3. Your introduction should be quite impressive as it makes the first impression to the examiner. It
either makes or breaks your overall score.
The greatest
are employed in the X
The lowest percentage of women
category
The most proportion of cars sold
are red
A significant number of holiday makers
come from Spain
The smallest
The largest
Twice as many
as
Three times as many
Many more
A lot more
Substantially more
Considerably more
Significantly more
Slightly more
Fractionally more
quite as
common
just as
popular as
nearly as
prevalent
almost as
not as
substantially more
women
considerably more
cars sold than
slightly more
holiday makers
fractionally more
less
much less
far less
considerably less
fractionally less
It is a line graph with 2 lines. The graph is asking to summarise the main
features of the unemployment rate.
Second Step (worked out): Collecting data/information:
Main Point: The unemployment rate has decreased in the USA and has
increased in Japan.
General Trend: Initially unemployment rate was higher in the USA than
Japan but over the period the USA managed to reduce the rate and in case
of Japan the reverse was true.
Conclusion: Unemployment rate was higher in the USA than Japan but
over the period the USA managed to reduce the rate and in case of Japan
the reverse was true.
You should make a plan after you are done with the first 2 steps. This step
involves the following orders.
The general trend part should be immediately after the introduction part. It
is recommended to write the general trend parts in the same paragraph
with the introduction. The general trend part should focus the main point
of the presentation and should not be too large with lots of information.
However you should not give the specific figure, time, amount or data
presented in the graph, rather try to use daily life English to make the main
reader interested about the whole writing. You can use phrases like As is
presented/ as is observed / in general / in common etc. to start this part.
The Detailed description part comes after the introduction and general
trend and should be written in the second paragraph. In this part, you
should describe the graph / table / chart / diagram etc. While describing,
keep in mind that, you are not expected to write down all the data provided
in the question, rather your ability to describe the presentation in general
English.
Do not describe all the data and facts presented in the graph.
Don't use contractions (can not=can't, do not =don't etc, will not=won't)
in your writing.
If you want to and really need to describe the result of the graph, then write
it at the end of the detailed description. However, if results-writing makes
something repeated ( those that has already been described), then you do
not need to write the result apparently.
The conclusion is an important part of the whole writing and that is why
you must be careful to write a better conclusion. The conclusion part of the
Academic IELTS writing 1 is also knows as summarising. So write down the
main point/theme of the graph in short. You should never include your own
point of view, personal opinion or suggestion to solve a problem in
conclusion. In some cases of Academic IELTS writing task 1, it optional to
write the conclusion, hence the data are already described and summarised
before the conclusion. However, if you need to write the conclusion part,
use one of the following words to start the sentence:
BAR GRAPH
Some of the most important language in task 1 is the compare and contrast
vocabulary. This is because the instructions tell you to
make comparisons where relevant
If you want to score well, you need some different ways to compare and
contrast. Here are some variations to help you out. It is not all
about more and less.
1. Comparisons between sentences
One way to make comparisons is to start a new sentence with a word/phrase
that shows that you are about to make a comparison with the previous
sentence. The basic words you need here are:
In contrast
The most popular form of holiday among the Welsh was self-catering with
over 60% choosing to cook for themselves. In contrast, only 5 % of the
English chose this form of vacation and hotel accommodation was much
more popular at 48%.
In comparison
Almost 50% of the English, Scots and Northern Irish chose to stay in a hotel
for their holiday. In comparison, staying in self-catering accommodation
was much less popular with around 10% of people choosing this.
However
The general pattern was for hotel accommodation to be the most popular
with around half the people choosing it. The majority of the Welsh, however,
chose to stay in self-catering accommodation.
On the other hand
It is clear that a majority of the British chose to stay in hotel for their
holiday. On the other hand, there was an exception to this because over 50%
of the Welsh opted for self-catering accommodation.
Note that we normally use a comma after In contrast and In comparison.
Note that there are lots of different ways to use compare and contrast and
these are just the most basic examples. If you are looking for a higher band
score, its good advice to learn different ways to use these words.
Note too that typically however is not used as the first word in a sentence.
2. Comparisons within sentences
Another possibility is to compare two pieces of information within the same
sentence. The basic words you need here are:
while
While there are 4 million miles of train lines in the UK, there are only 3
million in France.
whereas
Whereas the majority of the French prefer to travel to work by train, only a
small minority of the British do.
although
Although 15% of the French read novels, only 5% of the British do.
but
Almost 25% of French females study maths with a private tutor, but nearly
60% study English with one.
3. Comparisons with more or less/fewer
This is another obvious way to make comparisons and contrasts. You should
note though that you are normally going to compare numbers and nouns and
not adjectives. You want to remember these two key bit of grammar:
Than
Remember that after more/less/fewer we use than
5% more girls chose to read books than go to cinema.
Fewer/less
If the word is uncountable we use less, if it is countable we use fewer:
Fewer mobiles phones were bought in 2013 than 2014.
Less oil was consumed in 2013 than 2014.
4. Qualify your comparisons with much/far/slightly
or a number
This is similar. The idea here is that you still use less/more/fewer but this time
you explain how much. Typically, the best way to do this is to use a number:
Far fewer people chose to travel by train than by car. [Wheres the detail?]
25% fewer people chose to travel by train than by car. [Better now we
have detail and not just a comparison]
5. Comparisons with most or least/fewest
When you are looking for details to include, the highest/lowest number is
almost always important. This too is a form of comparison.
The most popular form of entertainment in the UK was going to the cinema.
The least common form of transport was taking a taxi.
6. Comparisons with similar or same or as..as
Dont forget that some of the numbers you will be comparing are similar.
These are the basic words and structures you need.
Similar (to)
The percentages of females and males who studied languages at university
were very similar.
A similar amount of gas and electricity was used domestically in homes.
The figures for 2012 were very similar to the figures for 2013.
Same as as
The percentage of females who studied at university in 2011 was almost
exactly the same as in 2012
7. Comparisons with differ/different/difference
If something is similar, it can also be different! Here is another set of basic
variations for you:
The amount of time spent at home differed by almost 25% according
to gender.
There was a difference of over 25% in the amount of time males and females
spent at home.
This figure was very different among males, only half of whom watched
television.
8. Comparisons with numbers
Another way to make comparisons is to do some simple arithmetic! Here are
some simple variations:
[5 million] more/less/fewer
5 million fewer units of gas were sold in 2014.
Twice
Twice as many people elected to use gas and not electricity for cooking [note
the twice as as structure]
Twice the amount of gas was used for cooking in this period. [note that we
amount with uncountable nouns]
Three/four etc times
Four times as many people chose to heat their house with electricity as with
gas.
Half
Half the number of people chose to use gas as electricity.
Electricity was half as popular as gas for cooking.
SAMPLE ANSWER
Key features
We now see what the 2 key features that need to be reported are. Remember these
will be the topics of our 2 content paragraphs :
2. how certain purposes of travel are more common than others (how long the
lines are)
This is fairly straightforward as all you need to do is arrange the different categories
into an order showing the most common and least common purposes.
1. commuting and shopping much the most common (around 20% average)
Tip: when you have many different categories, it is a good idea to group them
together under a few headings
A possible answer
There are, of course, many possible answers to this task. Here is one solution.
This bar chart shows the different reasons for making journeys in the UK in 2006
and how males and females differed in this.
It is immediately apparent that the most common purposes for travelling were
commuting and shopping, both being around 20 per cent of trips. The next most
common reasons were visiting friends and doing the school run at 15%, closely
followed by personal business at around 10%. Travelling for sport and entertainment
(7%) was only just more common than journeys for educational purposes (6%).
Finally, the fewest number of trips were travelling for holidays and walking, both of
which accounted for around 3 per cent of all journeys.
Typically, there were few major differences between males and females. In holidays,
personal business and walking both sexes took approximately the same amount of
journeys, while slightly more men travelled for educational purposes and more
women visited friends. Notably, almost twice as many men as women travelled for
entertainment reasons and, likewise, around 7% more men commuted to work. The
two areas in which women travelled significantly more than men were shopping and
the school run.
PIE CHART
The key point is that whatever the chart looks like the language you need is the
same. Take a look at these 3 pie charts and ask yourself what language you
need.
A chart with percentages
A chart without any numbers
The answer should be obvious. When you look at all three pie charts, you
should see that you need exactly the same language: its the language of
percentages. By definition the whole pie is 100% and each share of that pie
is also a percentage. It should make little or no difference how the pie chart is
labelled.
Tip: if you see a pie chart without % figures written in, dont panic. Consider
what the % must be.
Notes
1. percentage is more correct than percent (per cent is the correct spelling,
though no one I know uses it!)
2. amount is correctly used only with uncountable nouns: the variation for
countables in number
You are here: Home / Writing Task 1 / IELTS Writing Task 1 Maps Lesson
These two pie charts show the changes in popularity of different leisure
activities in the United States of America between 1999 and 2009. We can see
that the most popular leisure activities were almost the same in both periods,
but there were a number of differences in popularity between the various
activities.
Step 2: choose the details to include
There are 16 different figures you can include. This is too many. The task is to
select and report the most important details. This will include naming all the
activities, but not all the numbers. To do this, try looking for:
1. the biggest number
2. the smallest number
These are generally important details to include. You should also consider
what changes beween the two charts, not least because the task asks you to
make comparisons. So, ask yourself:
1. whats gone up
2. whats gone down
3. what hasnt changed
4. whats new
Putting this together, we need these details:
1. walking is most popular in both periods
2. yoga disappears and weightlifting is new
3. swimming doubles
4. aerobics, jogging and cycling all fall
5. soccer and camping dont change much
Step 3: organise your report
This will vary from task to task, but typically you will be looking at two content
paragraphs. As you write your paragraphs, you want to think of three key
ideas:
highlight the main points they come first
group similar ideas together
find a logical structure to present the points
In this case, I would go with this structure:
Paragraph 1
It is clear that walking was the most popular activity in both 1999 and 2009
with around 30% of Americans saying that they preferred it. Also, yoga was no
longer among the preferred activities in 2009, but weightlifting was chosen by
10% of people.
Paragraph 2
note the biggest changes cycling, jogging and aerobics all big fallers,
swimming the big riser.
The second most popular activity was soccer at just under 20% in both years, a
figure that was matched by swimming in 2009, having almost doubled in
popularity over the previous decade. Most of the other activities became less
popular over the same period of time, with cycling, jogging and aerobics all
falling by at least a half to under 10%. The one exception to this trend was
camping which stayed almost unchanged at around 9%.
Model answer
These two pie charts show the changes in popularity of different leisure
activities in the United States of America between 1999 and 2009. We can see
that the most popular leisure activities were almost the same in both
periods, but there were a number of differences in popularity
between the various activities.
It is clear that walking was the most popular activity in both 1999 and 2009,
with around 30% of Americans saying that they preferred it. Also, yoga was no
longer among the preferred activities in 2009, butweightlifting was chosen by
10% of people.
The second most popular activity was soccer at just under 20% in both years, a
figure that was matched by swimming in 2009, having almost doubled in
popularity over the previous decade. Most of the other activities became less
popular over the same period of time, with cycling, jogging and aerobics all
falling by at least a half to under 10%. The one exception to this trend was
camping which stayed almost unchanged at around 9%.
Standard phrases
These two pie charts show: the normal phrase to describe what the
chart/graph is about
We can see that: a phrase to state a main point
It is clear that: another phrase to identify a main point
Varying vocabulary
popular/popularity/preferred: you are going to repeat the word popular.
That is not a problem, provided you also use some variations. One way to do
this is to change the form of the word from popular to popularity. The
other word I use in this report is preferred: you should note I vary this too,
using it as an adjective and a verb. Other variations include to express a
preference and favourite.
1999/2009: another word you are going to repeat relates to time. Again, you
want to make sure you have some variation here. Note these: between 1999
and 2009, in both periods, in both years, over the previous
decade, over the same period of time.
General vocabulary
a number of: a simple but exceptionally useful phrase. Avoid using phrases
like lots of in IELTS
various: a useful and more advanced variant for different
exception to a trend: Learn this phrase. You will need to talk about things
that do not follow the normal pattern.
Dealing with numbers
Numbers are very important in this task. I suggest you take a look at my lesson
on dealing with numbers.
around 30%: you will use per cent a lot in this task. You do need to include
numbers, but you should avoid using too many of them. When you do use
them, try to do what I have done here and use language too, around is good
language for about
a figure that was matched by: figure is an exceptionally useful word which
can be used with numbers or percentages. This is a harder phrase that you
could try for yourself when talking about two similar/identical numbers.
at just under 20%: more good number language. This is very much better
than 18%.
having almost doubled: more approximate number language. Remember the
language of maths: half, double etc.
all falling by at least a half to under 10%: the phrase to note here is at least
which stayed almost unchanged at around 9%: this is better variation of did
not change
TABLE
Using paragraphs to organise your answer in a task 1 table
The table
This is a complex table. There are 21 different pieces of data for you think
about and organise. One thing is sure is that you cannot include all the data
you need to summarise it and select the main features
This is your summary statement. Id put this right at the start of your report as
it will help the reader/examiner understand what you are writing.
An X axis approach
A simple way to group the information is just to write about agriculture, then
manufacturing and then services. The benefit of this approach is that it is
clear. If you do this though you want to be smart about it. It is not enough just
to list all the information. You want to analyse/process those figures and find
some patterns to help you write and avoid repetition.
Note how the organisation in this variation. It is super clear no? First I do one ,
then the other, then the other. But the note too now I link the sentences
together and compare between the different sectors. This is a case where
repeating language is a good thing!
The figures for agriculture varied significantly. In Romania and Ukraine around
30% and 10% of the respective workforces worked in agriculture, while in all
the other countries this figure was 3.5% or lower. There was less marked
variation in the manufacturing sector with the percentages ranging from a high
of 37.4% in the Czech Republic down to around 15% in the UK and Greece.
There was approximately the same degree of variation in the service sector.
The UK, Greece, France and Germany all had around three quarters of the
workforce employed in the service industry. By contrast, only 60% of Czech
workers and fewer than 45% of Romanian workers were employed in
services.
A Y axis approach
An alternative is to look at the countries on the y axis and see if you can group
them together in some way. This may be slightly harder to do but it can still
work. What I see is:
UK/Greece/France and possibly Germany all follow the same pattern very
low agriculture and very high services
The organisation may be less clear this time but I hope you see that I am still
grouping information. This time I am taking a country by country approach and
picking out the important numbers.
The employment statistics for these sectors in UK, France, Greece and
Germany followed a very similar pattern with the figures for agriculture varying
between 1.3 and 3.5 %, manufacturing 5.2 and 24.6%, and the services 73.8
and 83.5%.
The Czech Republic, Ukraine and Romania all differed somewhat. These
countries all had a lower percentage of people working in the service
sectorwith only 43.9 % in Romania and 58.8 and 60% in Ukraine and Czech
republic respectively. In Romania the agricultural sector accounted for around
a quarter of the workforce and this figure very slightly exceeded the
percentage of Romanians employed in manufacturing. Ukraine too had a
greater proportion of workers in agriculture, but this was less than half that
amount at around 12%. While in the Czech Republic there was nearly 40% of
the workforce worked in manufacturing and that is around 10% more than in
any other country,
Here are the two complete answers. There is almost always more than one
logical approach.
Version 1
This table shows the percentage of the population working in the agricultural,
manufacturing and service sectors in 7 European countries in 2014. It is
immediately clear that in each case the highest proportion of people was
employed in the service sector and that, with one exception, the lowest was
employed in agriculture.
The figures for agriculture varied significantly. In Romania and Ukraine around
30% and 10% of the respective workforces worked in agriculture, while in all
the other countries this figure was 3.5% or lower. There was less marked
variation in the manufacturing sector with the percentages ranging from a high
of 37.4% in the Czech Republic down to around 15% in the UK and Greece.
There was approximately the same degree of variation in the service sector.
The UK, Greece, France and Germany all had around three quarters of the
workforce employed in the service industry. By contrast, only 60% of Czech
workers and fewer than 45% of Romanian workers were employed in
services.
It is notable how the UK, France, Germany and Greece all had a very low
proportion of people employed in agriculture and a very high proportion in
services. In contrast, the Czech Republic, Ukraine and Romania all had a
much more significant percentage of workers either in manufacturing or
agriculture.
Version 2
This table shows the percentage of the population working in the agricultural,
manufacturing and service sectors in 7 European countries in 2014. It is
immediately clear that in each case the service sector employed the highest
proportion of people and that, with one exception, agriculture employed the
lowest.
The employment statistics for these sectors in UK, France, Greece and
Germany followed a very similar pattern with the figures for agriculture varying
between 1.3 and 3.5 %, manufacturing 5.2 and 24.6%, and the services 73.8
and 83.5%.
The Czech Republic, Ukraine and Romania all differed somewhat. These
countries all had a lower percentage of people working in the service sector
with only 43.9 % in Romania and 58.8 and 60% in Ukraine and Czech
Republic respectively. In Romania the agricultural sector accounted for
around a quarter of the workforce and this figure very slightly exceeded the
percentage of Romanians employed in manufacturing. Ukraine too had a
greater proportion of workers in agriculture, but this was less than half that
amount at around 12%. While in the Czech Republic nearly 40% of the
workforce worked in manufacturing which was around 10% more than in any
other country
Food and
Housing Clothing Entertainment
drink
The table shows the amount of household income that five countries in
Europe spend per month on four items. Overall, it is evident that all five
countries spend the majority of their income on food and drink and housing,
but much less on clothing and entertainment.
Housing is the largest expenditure item for France, Germany and the UK, with
all of them spending around one third of their income on this, at 30%, 33%
and 37%, respectively. In contrast, they spend around a quarter on food and
drink. However, this pattern is reversed for Turkey and Spain, who spend
around a fifth of their income on housing, but approximately one third on food
and drink.
All five countries spend much less on the remaining two items. France and
Spain spend the least, at less than 10%, while the other three countries spend
around the same amount, ranging between 13% and 15%. At 19%, Germany
spends the most on entertainment, whereas UK and Turkey spend
approximately half this amount, with France and Spain between the two items.
PROCESS
In IELTS Writing Task 1, there are 2 types of processes which include
preferred for MP while NP is active voice. Below are some useful tips, sentence
Adverbs:
first/firstly/first of all, to star with, or The first step | is involved
+ Ving
| when + Clause
secondly, thirdly
then/next/after that/following that/following on from this,
subsequently/in the subsequent stage/ subsequent to that, finally..
==> Example: To begin with, the food is processed. The next step is when
it is packed.Finally, it is delivered.
Eg: Once obtained, raw materials and manufactured components are stored
for later assembly
Eg: Most consumer goods go through a series of stages before they emerge as
finished products ready for sale.
Eg: Assembly first depends upon the production planning stage, where it is
decided how and in what quantities the stored materials will be processed to
create sufficient quantities of finished goods.
X=The chart/diagram.
1, X (shows/describes/illustrates) how + clause
E.g: The diagram below shows how salt is removed from sea
water to make it drinkable
2, X (shows/describe/illustrates) + noun
Brick manufacturing
IELTS Writing Task 1
Topic 02
Model Answer:
First the raw material, clay, which was just below the surface of soil in
certain clay-rich areas has to be dug up by a digger.
Then the lumps of clay are placed on a metal grid in order to break up
the big chunks of clay into much smaller areas, which fall
through the metal grid onto a roller, whose motion further
segregates the bits of clay. Sand and water are added to make a
homogenous mixture, which is then either formed in molds or cut into
brick-shaped pieces by means of a wire cutter.
Those fresh bricks are then kept in a drying oven for at least 24 and a
maximum of 48 hours, several dozen if not hundreds of bricks at a
time. The dried bricks are then transferred to a so-called kiln, another
type of high temperature oven. First they are kept at a moderate
temperature of 200C 1300C. This process is followed by cooling
down the finished bricks for 48 to 72 hours in a cooling chamber.
Once the bricks have cooled down and have become hard, they get
packaged and delivered to their final destination, be it a building site
or storage.
IELTS Writing Task 1 Maps
Lesson
Introduction
This guide on IELTS Writing Task 1 maps questions will cover:
In the IELTS writing test you might be asked to describe a map in task
The first kind is very rare, as it only requires you to use the present
simple and it is impossible for any comparisons to be made.
The second kind does come up occasionally and would require you to
use present and future tenses. This kind of question is normally about
the future development of a town or city. It requires the same
vocabulary as the other two.
The third is the most common and will be the main focus of this post.
You will normally be shown two maps, as above and asked to select
and report the main features, and make comparisons where relevant.
You will obviously be using both present and past tenses to describe
the maps and how the town has developed.
Also, as this is a man-made process we will use the passive.
Structure
To describe two maps I advise my students to follow a four paragraph
structure.
Paragraph 2- Overview
Make two general statements about the map. You should describe the
maps generally and write about the most noticeable differences
between the two maps. You could ask yourself the following questions
to identify general changes. Is the map more or less residential? Is
there more or less countryside? Are there more or less trees? Were
the changes dramatic or negligible? Were there any major
improvements in infrastructure? How have the buildings and leisure
facilities changed?
Look at the sample answer below to see how I have used this
structure.
Below I will list various buildings and features and verbs we could
describe their change.
Examples:
The factory in the city centre was demolished and relocated to the
north of the city.
Examples:
The main road was extended and a new bridge built over the river.
Examples:
Pick two or three of the most noticeable differences in the map and
write a general statement for each. This will be your overview
paragraph.
You can use to the left and to the right, but a better way is to use
north, south, east and west. I normally advise my students to draw
the symbols on the question paper if they are not already there.
Examples:
The airport in the centre of the city was relocated to the north-east of
the river.
The school to the south-east was knocked down and a new one
built to the east of the forest.
Finally, you will also be expected to use prepositions of place, e.g.
at/in/on/by/beside/to/off/from, to describe where things are.
Examples:
The old road running from north to south was replaced by a new
motorway.
Both maps display an island, before and after it was developed for
tourism.
The island is approximately 250 metres long, has palm trees dotted
around it, is surrounded by ocean and has a beach to the west. Over
the period, the island was completely transformed with the addition of
a hotel and a pier; however the eastern part of the island appears to
have been left undeveloped.
A pier has also been built on the south coast of the island, allowing
yachts access to the resort. Apart from the trees, the beach remains
the only natural feature to remain relatively untouched; however it
does appear that it is now used for swimming.
(160 words)
Common Problems
Writing too much- Because there is more than one data source,
students tend to write about everything and this causes two problems.
The first problem is you only have 20 minutes to answer task 1
questions and you therefore dont have time to write about everything.
The second problem is that the question asks you to summarise and
report the main features, therefore you have to pick only a few
features and report them. In other words, if you write about everything,
you have not answered the question properly.
Solution Pick 2 of the most obvious features from each graph and
limit yourself to writing about these things and these things only. Dont
worry about leaving information out; the examiner will be actually
looking for your ability to leave insignificant information out because
this shows that you are summarising and only reporting
the main features. More on how to do this in the question analysis
below.
Cant find the main features This is related to the first point. As
stated above you will be looking for just 2 features in each graph. It is
often very difficult for students to decide which features are the most
significant.
Remember that the most obvious things are the main features. The
examiners are not trying to trick you and want you to tell them the very
obvious things about the graph, so dont get too clever and try to find
something less obvious.
Structure
This structure can be used for every question in which you are given
two different graphs.
Paragraph 1
Paragraph 2
1.
Paragraph 3
Paragraph 4
Sample Answer
Question The pie chart below shows the main reasons why
agricultural land become lesson productive. The table shows how
these causes affected three regions of the world during the 1990s.
(graphs in picture above).
Answer
The pie graph displays the principal causes why farming land
deteriorates while the table illustrates how three regions of the planet
were affected by these factors in the 1990s.
As you can see all I have done is change the words in the questions
using synonyms and then connected them using the word while.
We can clearly see from the pie chart that there are three primary
causes of farmland degradation, and over-grazing is the major one.
The table shows that Europe had a far higher percentage of
unproductive land compared to the other two regions in this time
period.
For this paragraph I have picked out the main features from each
graph and wrote them in a general way. Notice that I have not
included any numbers. We will support our ideas with number in the
next two paragraphs. Also, notice that I am using the present simple
for the pie chart because there is no date and the past tense for the
table because it was in the 1990s.
The table shows that nearly one quarter of Europes entire surface
had fallen victim to degeneration. Only a small proportion of North
Americas total land became less productive at 5% and Oceania was
marginally higher with a value of 13%.
Yes, I know that we talked about this first, but this is the
number 1 mistake that students make in the IELTS writing
exam!
You need lots of time for Writing Task 2! Do not waste that
time on task 1!!!
You must practise writing answers for Task 1 in 20 minutes.
This is super important.
Do not be one of the many students who say after they come
out of the exam: "I didn't have enough time for the writing"
Avoid this IELTS Writing Task 1 mistake and improve your band score
In IELTS Academic Writing task 1 you have to write a summary of the information
in a graph, chart, table or diagram (or more than one of these When the
information relates to countries such as America or Britain, which it often does, a
common mistake is to leave out the word the when reporting information about
the USA or the UK.
The word the should also be used for countries that involve a plural, e.g. the
Philippines.
Here are some examples of countries that should have the before them:
the UK
the USA
the Philippines
the Netherlands
(You shouldnt use the before these countries if use their other names: Britain,
America, China, Saudi Arabia or Holand).
Notice how the is missing from the following title in this graph: