IELTS Academic Writing Task 1 How to Answer IELTS Writing Academic

Hi, I’m Oli.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn how to answer
IELTS academic writing task one questions.

In task one of the academic IELTS writing
exam, you have to summarise and describe the

information given to you in some kind of chart.

You might have to summarise and describe a
pie chart, a line graph, a bar chart, a table,

a diagram, or even a map.

Are you watching on YouTube?

If so, you can find a link to our website
in the video description.

The lesson page on our website includes the
task as well as a model answer.

We recommend watching the video on our website
so you can refer to the task and the model

answer while you watch.

One more thing: do you want to watch this
video with subtitles?

You can!

Just click the ‘CC’ button in the bottom
right of your video player.

In this lesson, you’ll see a sample IELTS
academic writing task 1 question.

You can learn how to approach these questions
and write your own answer.

You’ll also see some useful tips to help
you improve your IELTS writing score.

Let’s start by looking at our sample question:
So, what should you do first?

With all IELTS writing, you need to organise
your ideas before you start.

For a chart such as this one, think about
how to connect the data.

Often, IELTS academic task one questions contain
lots of data.

Many students try to present every piece of
information, like a big list, but this is

a mistake.

Do you know why?

If you do this, your writing will probably
be too long and repetitive.

You also won’t have much progression in
your writing, which is needed for C&C scores

of six or higher.

So, you need to connect and group the data,
but how?

There’s no general rule here, but here’s
a good starting point: look for similarities

and contrasts.

In this question, you should look for similarities
and contrasts both within each chart, and

between the two charts.

Think about it now.

Look at the charts, and try to find similarities
and contrasts in the data.

You can see the full-sized chart on the webpage
for this lesson.

Don’t forget: if you’re watching on YouTube,
there’s a link in the video description.

Pause the video, and do it now!

Ready?

Here are some ideas.

In the first chart, the proportions for ‘living
with flatmates’ and ‘living with parents’

are similar, and they’re much larger than
the other two segments, which are similar

to each other.

In the second chart, the proportions for ‘living
with flatmates’ and ‘living alone’ are

similar.

‘Living with a partner or spouse’ is much
larger than all the other groups.

Between the two charts, the proportions for
‘living alone’ are very similar.

The other segments are all quite different,
especially ‘living with a partner or spouse’.

Did you get these ideas, or did you have different
ideas for similarities and contrasts?

There’s more than one way to do this.

But, you should think about this point before
you start writing.

Try to make connections in your head, and
put the data you’re given into groups.

This will help you to link the data when you
write, which is necessary for higher scores.

What else should you do before you start writing?

One: for a chart, check whether it shows figures,
or percentages, or a mix.

You need different language to talk about
these things.

If the chart shows figures, you’ll need
to talk about numbers, figures, amounts, and

so on.

If the chart shows percentages, you’ll need
to talk about percentages and proportions.

Here, these are pie charts, so you need to
talk about percentages and proportions.

Two: check if the data relates to the past,
the present, the future, or a combination.

Sometimes, we see IELTS students who don’t
pay attention to this, and then they mix different

verb tenses in their answer.

This could hurt your score.

Decide what verb tenses you need (past or present or future or mixed) and try
to keep it in your head as you write.

Here, the charts are from 2015, so you’ll
need past verb forms.

Three: ask yourself if the charts refer to
a moment in time, or changes over time.

You’ll need different language in each case.

Here, the charts refer to a moment in time.

This means you’ll need to use the verb ‘be’
a lot.

You won’t use verbs like ‘increase’
or ‘change’, like you would in some IELTS

task one questions.

Make sure you organise your ideas clearly
before you start writing.

Time spent planning will increase your chances
of writing a well-structured, complete task.

Now, you’re ready to write.

How should you start?

At the start of your answer, you should do
two things.

One: write a short paragraph – one or two
sentences – saying what the chart shows.

Two: write another short paragraph with an
overview.

This doesn’t have to be a separate paragraph;
you can put it together with the first paragraph

if you want.

It doesn’t matter.

Let’s look at these one by one.

For the first paragraph, you just need to
restate the information in the instructions,

but you should use paraphrase or different
structures to avoid too much repetition.

Look at the example from our model answer:
Often, IELTS students have problems with this.

This is because they try to follow the sentence
structure in the task, and just change the

words.

Paraphrase is useful, but you need to use
other skills, too.

For example, you can use different references.

The task refers to ‘two charts’ while
our model answer refers to ‘pie charts’.

You can put ideas in a different order.

The task says ‘living arrangements of two
different age groups’, but in our model

answer, we switch the order of these ideas,
as well as changing the words.

Sometimes, paraphrase is enough.

The task mentions ‘a certain country’.

In our model answer, we paraphrase this to
‘an unspecified country’.

Finally, you can avoid repetition by using
different levels of generality or specificity.

The task refers to ‘living arrangements’;
in our model answer, we list the four specific

categories.

You don’t need to change everything from
the task.

It’s fine to copy and repeat small chunks
of language.

Also, there are some things you have to repeat.

Here, there’s no way to change ‘in 2015’,
so we kept it the same.

One final point: it’s fine to copy any text
which appears on the chart itself.

This means you can – and should – copy
the categories, like ‘living alone’, ‘living

with parents’ and so on.

That gives you your first paragraph.

Next, you need to write the overview.

You can also put your overview paragraph at
the end, if you want.

For your overview, think about this: imagine
you want to tell someone about the chart,

but you can only say one or two sentences.

How would you do it?

Hopefully, this question is easier, because
you planned your answer, and found connections

between different points, and looked
for contrasts and similarities.

You did that, didn’t you?

You can use that here!

Your goal in the overview is to take the most
important points from the chart, without going

into detail.

If you want to try, then pause the video and
write your own overview sentence.

We’ll show you our example in a few seconds.

Did you do it?

Here’s our model sentence:
Our model overview is two sentences.

An overview should be one or two sentences
long.

If your overview is longer, it’s probable
that you’re either including too much detail,

or separating ideas which should be combined
into one sentence.

Don’t mention any specific numbers or statistics
in the overview.

Include big-picture details only.

Here, you can see two ideas.

One was comparing the two charts, and highlighting
that the trends are different in each one.

The second idea highlights the most popular
living arrangement in each group.

Like many things here, there isn’t just
one way to write an overview.

However, someone who reads your overview should
have a general idea of what the charts will

show.

Now, let’s see some skills you need to write
the rest of your answer.

After your overview, you’ll write one or
more paragraphs, explaining the contents of

the charts in more detail.

In this and the next three sections, you’ll
see some common problems which IELTS students

have, and how you can avoid them.

First, it’s easy for IELTS task one answers
to become repetitive.

Look at a sentence:
Looks fine, right?

Let’s add another one.

Hmm…

Not sure this is going well.

Let’s add one more.

Do you see the problem?

If you write like this, your writing becomes
repetitive, and starts to feel like a list.

Even if you change some words, like using
‘approximately’ instead of ‘about’,

or ‘proportion’ instead of ‘percentage’,
it won’t solve the problem.

So, what should you do?

There’s more than one idea here, but first,
you need to try to use varied sentence structures.

Look at the first sentence you saw before.

Here’s a challenge: how many ways can you
think of to say the same idea, without changing

the meaning, or losing any detail?

Pause the video, and try to write this idea
in at least three different ways.

Do it now!

Could you do it?

Here are some possibilities.

‘Around 20% of 25-34-year-olds lived alone.’

‘Among 25-34-year-olds, around 20% of people
lived alone.’

‘In the 25-34 age group, about 20% opted
to live alone.’

‘Approximately one fifth of those aged 25-34
lived by themselves.’

What about your ideas?

Were they similar to these, or different?

So, what’s going on here?

First, you can simply change the order of
the ideas, as in sentence one.

You can use an adverbial, like ‘among 25-34-year-olds’
in sentence two.

You can use different words to refer to the
same thing.

For example, instead of ’25-34-year-olds’,
sentence three refers to ‘the 25-34 age

group’.

Instead of ‘around 20 per cent’, sentence
four refers to ‘approximately one fifth’.

Sentences three and four also change the words
‘lived alone’, either by adding an idea

– ‘opted to live alone’ in sentence
three – or by paraphrasing – ‘lived

by themselves’ in sentence four.

Be careful with this, because when you change
the words, it’s easy to change the meaning.

Make sure that your words have the same meaning
as whatever you’re referring to.

Learning to vary your sentence structure is
vital if you want to get higher scores for

C&C and grammar.

However, there are other key skills you need.

Let’s look at another!

Look at two sentences.

These sentences are fine, but if you write
your whole answer like this, it will probably

get overlong and repetitive.

Also, to get higher grammar scores, you need
to use a range of complex sentence structures.

So, you should try to combine ideas where
you can.

For example:
You can also combine contrasting ideas, using

conjunctions like ‘while’, ‘whereas’,
‘although’ and so on.

Here’s a task for you.

Look at the two charts, and find two contrasting
data points.

Write one sentence describing them both,
linking the two ideas with a conjunction.

Pause the video and try it now!

Did you do it?

Let’s look at one example:

‘Among 35-44-year-olds, almost half lived
with their partner or spouse, while a much

smaller proportion lived with their parents
(around 10-15%).’

Of course, there are many possibilities here.

But, you should be thinking about this all
the way through your answer.

Look through the model answer.

Try to find where we’ve combined two or
more ideas in one sentence.

Take note of different ways to combine similar
or different ideas, and try to use them in

your writing.

Let’s move on and look at one more key skill.

Look at these three sentences.

‘The number of 35-44-year-olds living with
their parents was quite high – around 50.’

‘The percentage of 35-44-year-olds living
with flatmates decreased dramatically compared

to the younger age group.’

‘Just over a quarter of 35-44-year-olds
lived by themselves.’

What do you think?

Good sentences, or not?

All three sentences have problems.

Can you find them?

You’ll need to look at the charts, too.

Pause the video and think about it if you
want.

Any ideas?

Let’s look together.

All three sentences have issues with precision
of language.

We see these problems often in our students’
IELTS writing.

The first sentence refers to ‘number’
and ‘around 50’.

This is too loose.

First, the pie charts don’t give you numbers,
in the sense of quantities.

It’s a percentage, so you should use the
word ‘percentage’ or ‘proportion’.

Secondly, what does ‘50’
mean?

50 what?

If you mention a number, you should add the
units, in this case, ‘per cent’.

The second sentence has two problems.

First, it doesn’t make sense to say that
the percentage ‘decreased’.

‘Decrease’, ‘increase’ and similar
verbs are used when things change over time,

but these pie charts refer to one moment.

Secondly, ‘dramatically’ suggests a very
large difference or change, but in this case,

the difference between the two percentages
was not that great.

IELTS students often try to use words like
this to increase their vocabulary score.

However, it’s more important that your words
fit the data accurately.

Here’s a better version of sentence two:
What about the third sentence?

Very simple: the information is incorrect.

The pie chart shows that just under a quarter
of this age group lived alone.

When you’re under time pressure, it’s
easy to make mistakes like this.

However, mistakes with the data will limit
your TA score to six, so it’s important

to make sure you get every detail accurate.

Don’t forget to practise this further by
visiting the full version of this lesson on

our website.

You could also try writing your own answer
for this task.

Good luck if you have an IELTS exam coming
up soon!

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是奥利。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习如何回答
雅思学术写作任务一的问题。

在学术雅思写作考试的任务一中
,你必须用某种图表总结和描述

给你的信息。

您可能需要总结和描述
饼图、折线图、条形图、表格

、图表甚至地图。

你在 YouTube 上看吗?

如果是这样,您可以在视频说明中找到指向我们网站的链接

我们网站上的课程页面包括
任务和模型答案。

我们建议您观看我们网站上的视频,
以便您在观看时参考任务和模型

答案。

还有一件事:你想看这个
带字幕的视频吗?

你可以!

只需单击视频播放器右下角的“CC”按钮

在本课中,您将看到一个示例雅思
学术写作任务 1 问题。

您可以学习如何处理这些问题
并编写自己的答案。

您还将看到一些有用的提示,以帮助
您提高雅思写作成绩。

让我们先看看我们的示例问题:
那么,您首先应该做什么?

对于所有的雅思写作,你需要
在开始之前组织你的想法。

对于这样的图表,请考虑
如何连接数据。

通常,雅思学术任务一的问题包含
大量数据。

许多学生试图呈现每条
信息,就像一个大列表,但这是

一个错误。

你知道为什么吗?

如果你这样做,你的写作可能
会太长和重复。

你的写作也不会有太大的进步
,这是六分或更高的 C&C 分数所需要的

因此,您需要连接和分组数据,
但是如何?

这里没有一般规则,但这是
一个很好的起点:寻找相似之处

对比

在这个问题中,您应该
在每个图表内以及

两个图表之间寻找相似之处和对比。

现在想想。

查看图表,并尝试
在数据中找到相似之处和对比。

您可以在本课程的网页上查看全尺寸图表

不要忘记:如果您在 YouTube 上观看,
视频说明中有一个链接。

暂停视频,现在就开始!

准备好?

这里有一些想法。

在第一个图表中,“
与室友同住”和“与父母同住”

的比例相似
,并且比其他两个相似的部分要大得多

在第二张图表中,“
与室友同住”和“独居”的比例

相似。

“与伴侣或配偶一起生活”
比所有其他群体都要大得多。

在两张图表之间,
“独居”的比例非常相似。

其他部分则完全不同,
尤其是“与伴侣或配偶一起生活”。

你有没有得到这些想法,或者你
对相似之处和对比有不同的想法?

有不止一种方法可以做到这一点。

但是,你应该在开始写作之前考虑这一点

试着在你的脑海中建立联系,
并将你得到的数据分组。

这将帮助您在编写时链接数据
,这对于更高的分数是必要的。

在开始写作之前你还应该做什么?

一:对于图表,检查它是否显示数字、
百分比或混合。

你需要不同的语言来谈论
这些事情。

如果图表显示数字,您将
需要谈论数字、数字、金额

等。

如果图表显示百分比,您将
需要讨论百分比和比例。

在这里,这些是饼图,所以你需要
谈谈百分比和比例。

二:检查数据是否与过去
、现在、未来或组合相关。

有时,我们看到雅思的学生
不注意这一点,然后他们在答案中混合了不同的

动词时态。

这可能会损害您的分数。

决定你需要什么动词时态(过去的、现在的、未来的或混合的),并
在写作时尽量记住它。

在这里,图表来自 2015 年,所以你
需要过去的动词形式。

三:问问自己这些图表是指
某个时刻,还是随时间变化。

在每种情况下,您都需要不同的语言。

在这里,图表指的是某个时刻。

这意味着您需要经常使用动词“
be”。

你不会像在一些雅思任务一题中那样使用“增加”
或“改变”之类的动词

确保
在开始写作之前*清楚地组织你的想法。

花时间计划将增加您
编写结构良好、完整任务的机会。

现在,您可以开始编写了。

你应该如何开始?

在你的回答开始时,你应该做
两件事。

一:写一个简短的段落——一两
句话——说出图表显示的内容。

二:写另一个简短的段落
概述。

这不必是单独的段落; 如果你愿意,
你可以把它和第一段放在一起

没关系。

让我们一一来看看。

对于第一段,您只需要
重述说明中的信息,

您应该使用释义或不同的
结构以避免过多的重复。

看看我们的典型答案中的例子:
雅思学生经常会遇到这个问题。

这是因为他们试图遵循
任务中的句子结构,只是改变

单词。

释义很有用,但你也需要使用
其他技能。

例如,您可以使用不同的引用。

任务指的是“两个图表”,而
我们的模型答案指的是“饼图”。

您可以按不同的顺序排列想法。

任务说“两个
不同年龄组的生活安排”,但在我们的模型

答案中,我们改变了这些想法的顺序,
以及改变了单词。

有时,转述就足够了。

任务提到“某个国家”。

在我们的模型答案中,我们将其解释为
“一个未指定的国家”。

最后,您可以通过使用
不同级别的一般性或特殊性来避免重复。

任务是指“生活安排”;
在我们的模型答案中,我们列出了四个特定

类别。

您无需更改
任务中的一切

复制和重复
小块语言很好。

此外,有些事情你必须重复。

在这里,“2015 年”没有办法改变,
所以我们保持不变。

最后一点:复制
图表本身出现的任何文本都可以。

这意味着您可以而且应该复制
这些类别,例如“独居”、“

与父母同住”等。

这给了你你的第一段。

接下来,您需要编写概述。

如果需要,您还可以将概述段落
放在末尾。

对于您的概述,请考虑一下:假设
您想告诉某人有关图表的信息,

但您只能说一两句话。

你会怎么做?

希望这个问题更容易,因为
你计划了你的答案,发现

了不同点之间的联系,并寻找
了对比和相似之处。

你这样做了,不是吗?

你可以在这里使用它!

您在概述中的目标是
从图表中获取最重要的点,而

不是详细说明。

如果您想尝试,请暂停视频并
编写您自己的概述句子。

我们将在几秒钟内向您展示我们的示例。

你做了吗?

这是我们的模型句:
我们的模型概述是两个句子。

概述应该是一两
句话。

如果您的概述较长,则可能
是您包含太多细节,

或者将应该组合
成一句话的想法分开。

不要在概述中提及任何具体数字或统计数据

仅包括宏观细节。

在这里,您可以看到两个想法。

一是比较两张图表,并
强调每张图表的趋势不同。

第二个想法突出
了每个组中最受欢迎的居住安排。

就像这里的许多事情
一样,编写概述的方法不止一种。

但是,阅读您的概述的人应该
对图表将显示的内容有一个大致的了解

现在,让我们看看写下其余答案所需的一些技能

概述之后,您将写一个或
多个段落,

更详细地解释图表的内容。

在本节和接下来的三节中,您将
看到雅思学生遇到的一些常见问题

,以及如何避免这些问题。

首先,雅思任务一的答案很
容易变得重复。

看一句话:
看起来不错吧?

让我们再添加一个。

嗯……

不确定这是否进展顺利。

让我们再添加一个。

你看到问题了吗?

如果你这样写,你的写作就会变得
重复,并且开始感觉像一个清单。

即使你改变一些词,比如用
“大约”代替“大约”,

或者用“比例”代替“百分比”,
也不能解决问题。

那你该怎么办?

这里有不止一个想法,但首先,
你需要尝试使用不同的句子结构。

看看你之前看到的第一句话。

这是一个挑战:
在不改变意思或丢失任何细节的情况下,你能想出多少种方式来表达同一个想法

暂停视频,并尝试
以至少三种不同的方式写下这个想法。

现在做!

你能做到吗?

这里有一些可能性。 “

大约 20% 的 25-34 岁的人独居。” “

在 25-34 岁的人中,大约 20% 的人
独居。” “

在 25-34 岁的人群中,大约 20% 的人选择
了独居 ' “

大约五分之一的 25-34 岁
的人独自生活。”

你的想法怎么样?

它们与这些相似,还是不同?

那么,这里发生了什么?

首先,您可以简单地改变
想法的顺序,如第一句。

您可以在第二句中使用副词,例如“在 25-34 岁之间”

您可以使用不同的词来指代
同一事物。

例如,第三句不是“25-34 岁”,而是
指“25-34 岁年龄

组”。 第四

句不是“大约 20%”,而是
“大约五分之一”。

第三和第四句也改变了
“独自生活”这个词,或者通过在第三句中添加一个想法

——“选择独自生活”
——或者通过解释——在第四句中“独自生活

”。

请注意这一点,因为当您
更改单词时,很容易更改含义。

确保您的话与
您所指的内容具有相同的含义。

如果你想在 C&C 和语法方面获得更高的分数,学习改变你的句子结构是至关重要的

但是,您还需要其他关键技能。

让我们看看另一个!

看两句话。

这些句子很好,但是如果你这样写
你的整个答案,它可能会

变得冗长和重复。

此外,要获得更高的语法分数,您
需要使用一系列复杂的句子结构。

所以,你应该尽可能地结合想法

例如:
您还可以结合对比的想法,使用

“while”、“whereas”、
“although”等连词。

这是给你的任务。

查看两张图表,找到两个对比鲜明的
数据点。

写出一个句子来描述它们,
用连词将这两个想法联系起来。

暂停视频并立即尝试!

你做了吗?

让我们来看一个例子:“

在 35-44 岁的人群中,几乎一半
与伴侣或配偶同住,而

与父母同住的比例要小得多
(大约 10-15%)。”

当然,还有很多可能性 这里。

但是,您应该在
回答过程中一直考虑这一点。

浏览模型答案。

试着找出我们
在一个句子中结合了两个或多个想法的地方。

注意组合相似
或不同想法的不同方法,并尝试在写作中使用它们

让我们继续看看另一个关键技能。

看看这三个句子。 “

与父母同住的 35-44 岁的
人数相当多——大约 50 人。” “

与年轻的年龄组相比,与室友同住的 35-44 岁的比例显着下降

。” “

刚刚结束 四分之一的 35-44 岁的人独自
生活。“

你怎么看?

好句子,还是不好?

这三个句子都有问题。

你能找到他们吗?

您还需要查看图表。

如果您愿意,请暂停视频并考虑一下

有任何想法吗?

一起来看看吧。

这三个句子都存在
语言准确性问题。

我们经常在学生的
雅思写作中看到这些问题。

第一句话是指“数字”
和“大约50”。

这太宽松了。

首先,从数量的意义上说,饼图不会给你数字

这是一个百分比,所以你应该使用
“百分比”或“比例”这个词。

其次,“50”
是什么意思?

50什么?

如果你提到一个数字,你应该加上
单位,在这种情况下,“百分比”。

第二句话有两个问题。

首先,
说百分比“下降”是没有意义的。 当事物随时间变化时使用

“减少”、“增加”和类似的
动词,

但这些饼图指的是某一时刻。

其次,“戏剧性地”暗示了非常
大的差异或变化,但在这种情况下,

两个百分比之间的差异
并没有那么大。

雅思学生经常尝试使用这样的单词
来提高他们的词汇量。

然而,更重要的是你的文字
准确地符合数据。

这是第二句的更好版本:
第三句呢?

很简单:信息不正确。

饼图显示,这个年龄组中只有不到 1/4
的人独居。

当你面临时间压力时,很
容易犯这样的错误。

但是,数据错误会将
您的 TA 分数限制为 6,

因此确保每个细节都准确非常重要。

不要忘记通过
访问我们网站上本课程的完整版本来进一步练习

您也可以尝试为此任务编写自己的答案

祝你雅思考试
快到了!

感谢收看!

下次见!