IELTS Academic Writing Task 1 - How to Answer IELTS Writing Academic
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,
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
One more thing: do you want to watch this video with subtitles?
Just click the βCCβ button in the bottom right of your video player.
In this lesson, youβll see a sample IELTS academic writing task 1 question.
You can learn how to approach these questions and write your own answer.
Youβll also see some useful tips to help you improve your IELTS writing score.
Letβs 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
If you do this, your writing will probably be too long and repetitive.
You also wonβt have much progression in your writing, which is needed for C&C scores
So, you need to connect and group the data, but how?
Thereβs no general rule here, but hereβs a good starting point: look for *similarities*
In this question, you should look for similarities and contrasts both within each chart, and
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.
Donβt forget: if youβre watching on YouTube, thereβs a link in the video description.
Pause the video, and do it now!
In the first chart, the proportions for βliving with flatmatesβ and βliving with parentsβ
are similar, and theyβre much larger than the other two segments, which are similar
In the second chart, the proportions for βliving with flatmatesβ and βliving aloneβ are
βLiving with a partner or spouseβ is much larger than all the other groups.
Between the two charts, the proportions for βliving aloneβ are very similar.
The other segments are all quite different, especially βliving with a partner or spouseβ.
Did you get these ideas, or did you have different ideas for similarities and contrasts?
Thereβs 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 youβre 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, youβll need to talk about numbers, figures, amounts, and
If the chart shows percentages, youβll 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 donβt pay attention to this, and then they mix different
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 youβll need past verb forms.
Three: ask yourself if the charts refer to a moment in time, or changes over time.
Youβll need different language in each case.
Here, the charts refer to a moment in time.
This means youβll need to use the verb βbeβ a lot.
You wonβt use verbs like βincreaseβ or βchangeβ, like you would in some IELTS
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.
At the start of your answer, you should do two things.
One: write a short paragraph β one or two sentences β saying what the chart shows.
Two: write another short paragraph with an overview.
This doesnβt have to be a separate paragraph; you can put it together with the first paragraph
Letβs 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
Paraphrase is useful, but you need to use other skills, too.
For example, you can use different references.
The task refers to βtwo chartsβ while our model answer refers to βpie chartsβ.
You can put ideas in a different order.
The task says βliving arrangements of two different age groupsβ, 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 βa certain countryβ.
In our model answer, we paraphrase this to βan unspecified countryβ.
Finally, you can avoid repetition by using different levels of generality or specificity.
The task refers to βliving arrangementsβ; in our model answer, we list the four specific
You donβt need to change *everything* from the task.
Itβs fine to copy and repeat small chunks of language.
Also, there are some things you have to repeat.
Here, thereβs no way to change βin 2015β, so we kept it the same.
One final point: itβs fine to copy any text which appears on the chart itself.
This means you can β and should β copy the categories, like βliving aloneβ, βliving
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.
Hopefully, this question is easier, because you planned your answer, and found connections
between different points, and looked for contrasts and similarities.
Your goal in the overview is to take the most important points from the chart, without going
If you want to try, then pause the video and write your own overview sentence.
Weβll show you our example in a few seconds.
Hereβs our model sentence: Our model overview is two sentences.
An overview should be one or two sentences long.
If your overview is longer, itβs probable that youβre either including too much detail,
or separating ideas which should be combined into one sentence.
Donβt mention any specific numbers or statistics in the overview.
Include big-picture details only.
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 isnβt 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, letβs see some skills you need to write the rest of your answer.
After your overview, youβll write one or more paragraphs, explaining the contents of
In this and the next three sections, youβll see some common problems which IELTS students
have, and how you can avoid them.
First, itβs easy for IELTS task one answers to become repetitive.
Look at a sentence: Looks fine, right?
Hmmβ¦
If you write like this, your writing becomes repetitive, and starts to feel like a list.
Even if you change some words, like using βapproximatelyβ instead of βaboutβ,
or βproportionβ instead of βpercentageβ, it wonβt solve the problem.
Thereβs more than one idea here, but first, you need to try to use varied sentence structures.
Look at the first sentence you saw before.
Hereβs 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.
βAround 20% of 25-34-year-olds lived alone.β
βAmong 25-34-year-olds, around 20% of people lived alone.β
βIn the 25-34 age group, about 20% opted to live alone.β
βApproximately one fifth of those aged 25-34 lived by themselves.β
Were they similar to these, or different?
First, you can simply change the order of the ideas, as in sentence one.
You can use an adverbial, like βamong 25-34-year-oldsβ in sentence two.
You can use different words to refer to the same thing.
For example, instead of β25-34-year-oldsβ, sentence three refers to βthe 25-34 age
groupβ.
Instead of βaround 20 per centβ, sentence four refers to βapproximately one fifthβ.
Sentences three and four also change the words βlived aloneβ, either by adding an idea
β βopted to live aloneβ in sentence three β or by paraphrasing β βlived
by themselvesβ in sentence four.
Be careful with this, because when you change the words, itβs easy to change the meaning.
Make sure that your words have the same meaning as whatever youβre referring to.
Learning to vary your sentence structure is vital if you want to get higher scores for
However, there are other key skills you need.
These sentences are fine, *but* if you write your whole answer like this, it will probably
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 βwhileβ, βwhereasβ, βalthoughβ and so on.
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!
βAmong 35-44-year-olds, almost half lived with their partner or spouse, while a much
smaller proportion lived with their parents (around 10-15%).β
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 weβve 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
Letβs move on and look at one more key skill.
Look at these three sentences.
βThe number of 35-44-year-olds living with their parents was quite high β around 50.β
βThe percentage of 35-44-year-olds living with flatmates decreased dramatically compared
βJust over a quarter of 35-44-year-olds lived by themselves.β
All three sentences have problems.
Youβll need to look at the charts, too.
Pause the video and think about it if you want.
All three sentences have issues with precision of language.
We see these problems often in our studentsβ IELTS writing.
The first sentence refers to βnumberβ and βaround 50β.
First, the pie charts donβt give you *numbers*, in the sense of quantities.
Itβs a percentage, so you should use the word βpercentageβ or βproportionβ.
Secondly, what does β50β mean?
50 what?
If you mention a number, you should add the units, in this case, βper centβ.
The second sentence has two problems.
First, it doesnβt make sense to say that the percentage βdecreasedβ.
βDecreaseβ, βincreaseβ and similar verbs are used when things change over time,
but these pie charts refer to one moment.
Secondly, βdramaticallyβ 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, itβs more important that your words fit the data accurately.
Hereβs 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 youβre under time pressure, itβs easy to make mistakes like this.
However, mistakes with the data will limit your TA score to six, so itβs important
to make sure you get every detail accurate.
Donβt forget to practise this further by visiting the full version of this lesson on
You could also try writing your own answer for this task.