IELTS Reading – 10 top tips IELTS Reading – 10 top tips |
Adapted from Dominic
Cole's IELTS Blog
http://www.dcielts.com/ielts-reading/10-top-tips/#ixzz1yjjMyv8Z
For many
academic IELTS candidates reading is the hardest paper and the one which
requires most training. Following are suggestions for different ways to make
that training as efficient as possible. These pieces of advice are fairly
general and are designed to help you think about the best way to train yourself
in IELTS reading and how to avoid some common mistakes.
1. Beat the fear – read as much as
possible
My first
suggestion is to read as much as possible. By this I don’t mean do endless
IELTS practice tests, I mean do as much general reading as possible. I suggest
you focus on reading short articles on topics that interest you or on topics
that are common in IELTS – newspapers and magazines are a great resource here.
One reason
why this is such a good idea is that many candidates freeze in the reading
believing it is too hard and so fail to get their band score. If, however, you
read enough “native English” before the exam, you will become more and more
confident in looking at texts where you don’t understand every word. Confidence
is a very important concept in IELTS. Find
something that interests you and read. That’s all.
2. Improve key skills – skimming and
scanning and reading in detail
A major
problem in the exam is the length of the texts and you will not have time to
read them all carefully. You need to train your speed reading skills so that
you can read as efficiently as possible. Two important skills are skimming
which is reading quickly for general meaning and scanning which is looking for
specific information.
You may
sometimes see advice saying that you don’t need to read in detail. Incorrect.
Bad advice. You shouldn’t read the whole text in detail but you will need to
parts of the text in detail – if you want to get the right answer. Put simply,
skimming and scanning are useful skills to help show you where the answer might
be: reading in detail tells you what the answer is.
3. Time management – experiment to
see what works
Because the
texts are so long you need to have a definite strategy for how you manage your
time in the exam to make sure you finish on time. This means deciding:
how long you
look at the text before answering questions
how long you
spend on each question
how long you
spend on each group of questions
how long you
spend on each text
do you leave
time at the end to go back at look at unanswered questions?
There is a
lot to consider here. You will find books and websites that insist you do it
their way. They may claim to have a magic formula and that you must do this or
you must do that. Ignore them. Their advice may be good for some people but not
for you.
The key
point here is that different learners have different styles and different
needs. Much the best advice here is to
experiment and try different approaches and see what works best for you.
4. Focus on the question – avoid
careless errors
The texts in
IELTS are typically quite hard, so candidates spend as much time as possible
reading the texts. Mistake. Why? Well, a huge amount of mistakes are made by
not focusing enough on the exact question. It can be easy if you are in a hurry
to miss a word such as “always” or “often”: the problem is those sorts of words
can change the meaning of questions.
There is an
easy solution to this problem: it is to go back and look at the question before
you write in the answer. Make sure that the question says what you think it
says. You will normally save yourself 2/3 marks this way.
5. Learn the exam – know the
different types of questions
There are
8/9 different types of reading question that examiners may use. Before the
exam, you should make yourself familiar with each type of question as they are
slightly different. Look at the different types of reading questions as a first
step to see what the question types are. The next stage is to experiment and
see what techniques you are going to use for each type of question.
This may
mean that you approach different types of questions differently.
Details of
question types here: http://www.ielts.org/test_takers_information/test_sample/academic_reading_sample.aspx
6. Train yourself, don’t test
yourself
One common
mistake candidates make is to practise exam questions too much. Exam practice
is important to learn the timing (3 above) and learn the question types (5
above), but that does not mean that every time you practise reading you need to
do it in exam conditions. My suggestion is that you do some “open book” tests
where you can see the answers as you do the questions. This way you will learn
how examiners set questions and how to find the answers. If you just test
yourself, this may not happen.
7. Learn how to underline
This is a
very specific piece of advice. You may believe it is wrong to write in books
and generally I’d agree with you, but IELTS is different. A very strong
suggestion is that you should underline words in the text in the exam. There
are at least two reasons for this:
if you underline
key words in the text, it can help you organise the text and this will save you
time in the exam
if you find
an answer, it is sensible to underline the part of the passage that relates to
the question as a check (see 4 above) and to write the number of the question
next to it in case you find a better answer later
How you do
this will depend on you and your style. Some people underline different types
of words in different ways. I’d only add that less is more: if you underline
too much, it can become confusing.
8. Beware word matching – be careful
with key words
One very
common mistake is to match a word in the question with a word in the text and
to think you have found your answer. It is almost never that simple and I am
tempted to say that if the words do match, then that is not your answer. What
you are normally looking for are either synonyms (words with a similar meaning)
or paraphrases (short bits of text that say the same as the question.
One reason
candidates make this mistake is that teachers (myself included) tend to say
look for key words in the question. This is helpful advice to show you where
the answer might be and which paragraph it might be in. After that you need to
go back and read the whole question carefully to see what the answer is.
9. The questions follow the text –
normally
This is a
very practical piece of advice and could save you a lot of wasted time.
Typically, the questions will come in the order of the text: so the answer to
question 3 will come after the answer to question 2. This can be very helpful
in the exam if you are a quick worker who goes through the questions once for
the easy ones and then a second time for the harder ones. If you have answer 4
underlined and answer 6 underlined then you know where answer 5 must come.
One word of warning. In certain types
of question (eg paragraph matching) the order of the questions are jumbled (not
in the order of the text).
10. The questions or the text – which
do you read first?
There is no
one right answer here.
Text books tend
to advise you to read the text quickly first so that you know how the text is
organised. This helps as you will save time later by knowing which paragraph
will contain the answer. This can be a good approach, particularly for high
level candidates provided you don’t spend too much reading and you have
notes/underlinings afterwards.
Many
teachers say that you should read the questions first and not read the whole
passage. There is logic here, too. Normally, you do not have to understand the
meaning of the whole passage to answer the questions, so why waste time reading
it? This approach can work, especially for lower level candidates who might not
understand too much of the passage anyway.
However, there
is always a third way. Life is not black and white. It is quite possible to
decide to use different strategies for certain question types. In paragraph
matching you are going to have to read the whole passage, so you might decide
to read first then. In the short answer questions, you might decide you look at
the questions first. As ever, you decide.
The only bad
piece of advice is the one that tells you you must do it their way. Ignore
them. The only right way is the way that works.
11. Fill out the answer sheet
Okay, this
is an eleventh tip. Practise filling out the answer sheet before you get to the
exam. Too many avoidable mistakes are
made this way. I’d go further: whenever you practise IELTS reading, use an
answer sheet. Two points:
when you go
through the answers in your practice book, make sure that you have written the
answer exactly as it is in the book – anything else will lose you the point
you need to
fill out your answers in the 60 minutes.
IELTS Reading – 10 top tips | Dominic
Cole's IELTS Blog http://www.dcielts.com/ielts-reading/10-top-tips/#ixzz1yjjMyv8Z
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