IELTS Test
Candidates can sit either the:
IELTS Academic test, which is used to assess language level for university or college entrance in many English speaking countries, or the:
IELTS General Training test, which is used for entry to further education, or for migration purposes,
Test structure
The test has four parts:
Listening (4 Sections and 40 questions – about 30 minutes in total)
Reading (3 Sections and 40 questions – 1 hour)
Writing (2 Tasks – report or letter, and an essay on a social topic – 1 hour)
Speaking (1 interview in 3 parts, with one assessor – 11-14 minutes in total)
Test scoring
Each part of the test is scored from 0-9 including half scores, and then an overall score is calculated. Different institutions set their own required, entry levels.
Official IELTS test site
The official IELTS test site ( www.ielts.org ) has detailed descriptions of what each score means, as well as lists of all the test centres, information on test costs and test dates in different countries, assessment criteria, and research reports on different facets of the IELTS test.