Latest and greatest on TEFLtastic

A list of new content on TEFLtastic,

mixed with some classic materials that are well worth remembering.

Updated every couple of days.

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Advice on Present Perfect Simple and Continuous problems – NEW WORKSHEETS

How to teach English for the insurance industry – NEW

Xmas and New Year monologues extended speaking – NEW added to my huge list of Xmas and New Year materials

11 stimulating zero conditional practice activities – NEW

Past Perfect sentence completion games – NEW

Negative imperative with don’t games – NEW

Questions about families I don’t know game – NEW

Magic E in IELTS Listening gapfill answers – NEW

How to teach third person -s – NEW

Past Continuous comparing experiences boasting game – NEW

Months of the year dice games – NEW added to my huge list of dice games

Negative adjectives and offers with will – NEW

Good and bad job interview questions (with indirect questions practice) – NEW

Health problems and solutions IELTS Speaking Part 3 – NEW

Nature and the environment problems and solutions (with useful phrases for IELTS Writing Task 2 problem and solution tasks) – NEW

Good and taboo used to questions – NEW added to my used to page and my taboo topics blog post

English for the packaging industry games/ worksheets – NEW PAGE

Describing places with can and can’t games NEW added to my describing places page and my can/ can’t page

How to teach wish and if only added to my teaching tenses articles page and my Unreal Past page – NEW

Guess the person from their personality and appearance game – NEW added to my describing people page

How to teach diphthongs – NEW

Fun writing group emails practice activities – NEW ARTICLE

Feelings in C2 Proficiency Listening Part 4 – NEW added to my CPE Listening page and my feelings vocabulary page

Fun practice for both the third and mixed conditional – NEW

Teaching IELTS Listening: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Edition – NEW EDITION

Teaching IELTS Writing: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Edition – NEW EDITION

Teaching C2 Proficiency: Interactive Classroom Activities – MY NEWEST E-BOOK

Updated 27 December 2025

Posted in IELTS, Photocopiable worksheets, Teaching English as a Foreign Language | Comments Off on Latest and greatest on TEFLtastic

My TEFL race against time

My daughter is well into her second term at Japanese high school, so I now only need the world of TEFL to survive another two and half years before my in-laws’ university savings account kicks in and I can achieve my childhood ambition of becoming a tramp.

Which do you think will end first, the whole industry of teaching and writing about teaching English, or my daughter’s three years in high school?? It could go either way, but I predict it will come right down to the wire like Baby Groot with a bomb/ your own choice of Hollywood bomb countdowns. Any idea what odds I could get on it from Paddy Power?

Posted in Teaching English as a Foreign Language | 2 Comments

Analysis of IELTS Academic 19

The Cambridge official IELTS practice exam books are from the organisation that writes the real tests and so are the most important source of information about what could be in the actual test, particularly about how it is changing from year to year. Conversely, the tests are not actual past papers, so it is also important to analyse them for things which are unrepresentative and so candidates shouldn’t expect to be in their real test. This list analyses a recent book for both purposes, based on comparisons with my detailed analyses of the previous 18 books. It goes through the test paper by paper, with the most important things to notice underlined.

Analysis of IELTS 19 Listening

IELTS 19 Listening Part 1

Typical aspects

  • Like every Listening Part 1 task since 2019, all tasks are gapfill tasks asking for “one word and/ or a number” or “one word only”
  • Almost all of the tests have both numbers and spelling (usually of names), with the one example with no spelling being not so untypical
  • There are a mix of face-to-face and phone conversations
  • All recordings are split into two parts with a pause in between
  • The splits in the recordings are always at an obvious place like when the task and/ or page changes (which is typical but not universal)

Peculiarities

  • Three of the four situations are ones in which neither person is taking notes such as two chats between friends, which is very untypical, makes the whole listening task much less natural, and takes away the reason for writing answers in note form. Previous tests have (almost?) always been service situations such as visiting a housing officer in which one party is naturally taking notes.
  • Three of the four tests switch from “one word and/ or a number” to “one word only” about halfway through, which is a untypical combination of two common task types

IELTS 19 Listening Part 2

Typical aspects

  • Three of the tests are monologues (which is very typical, though not universal)
  • All of the tests split the Part 2 tasks over two pages
  • All of the tests have at least two different tasks
  • All of the recordings are split into two parts with a pause in between
  • The splits in the recordings are always at a change of page and change of task (which is typical but not universal)
  • One of the tests has a map task as the second task (which on average appears once per book)
  • All of the tests have matching tasks such as choosing two options
  • Three of the tests have multiple choice tasks
  • None of the tests have other kinds of tasks (so no gapfill tasks, etc)
  • Some of the topics are fairly typical (visits to historic homes, future events, etc)

Peculiarities

  • One of the tests is not quite a monologue as it has a radio interviewer asking a couple of questions to get the other person to speak (which is rare but no unique)
  • One of the tests has a podcast, which means it is not a situation where listeners will need the information and be listening carefully, so is less realistic as a listening task than the vast majority of Part Two situations

IELTS 19 Listening Part 3

Typical aspects

  • Like all tests recently and most tests before that, all tasks are matching tasks (“Choose… options”) and multiple choice (so there are no gapfill tasks)
  • There are three examples with two tasks (= with one change of task), and one example with three tasks/ two changes of task
  • All recordings are split into two parts, always at an obvious place when the task and page changes
  • The recordings have two speakers (but never three speakers, as happens occasionally)
  • There is one example of the typical topic of two students planning their joint presentation together
  • The common topics of health and the environment both come up
  • Some of the tests have the typical functional language in this part of giving opinions and giving advice

Peculiarities

  • There is no example of a professor/ teacher talking to a student
  • The example of the typical topic of projects is not two students planning their joint project or a professor giving advice on a student’s project (as has almost always been the case)
  • One of the tests is two teachers talking to each other about their lessons (which has never happened before in the official practice tests, and is difficult for students studying for IELTS to relate to)
  • Three of the four examples are just people who happen to be chatting about something (not having an arranged discussion to sort something out)
  • Topics include the unusual one of fashion and the strange one of books

IELTS 19 Listening Part 4

Typical aspects

  • The recordings are all monologues
  • Most recordings are clearly in an academic setting (showing the usual contrast with Listening Part 2)
  • Like all recent and almost all fairly recent tests, all of the questions are “one word only” gapfill tasks
  • Like all tests since 2017 and most test before that, the recordings are split, always at an obvious point where there is a change of topic and a new subheading above it
  • Typical topics of history, nature and science are included

Peculiarities

  • One test is split into three parts (for possibly the first time in Part Four in official exam practice books, and something that has very rarely happened in any part)
  • Half of the recordings are not the usual format of a university lecture
  • One recording is a student presentation instead of an expert’s lecture (again, possibly for the very first time)
  • One of the recordings seems a bit too opinionated and starts too suddenly to be the usual university lecture

Analysis of IELTS 19 Reading

Coming soon(ish).

Analysis of IELTS 19 Academic Writing

IELTS 19 Academic Writing Task 1

Typical aspects

  • There is a good mix of typical task types (maps, bar chart and pie chart, flowchart, line graph)
  • There are a mix of times (past, past and present, and present)
  • Most tasks have only one kind of data, but one has two (both a pie chart and a bar chart)
  • The map task is two maps showing changes over time
  • North is given on the map (which is generally true about 50% of the time)
  • The line graph shows past data (which is the most common time for line graphs)
  • The flowchart shows a process which is always that way so needs Present Simple (including Present Simple passive)
  • Comparisons are relevant in all tasks apart from the flowchart (which sometimes has things that can be compared, but sometimes is like this one with no figures to compare)
  • No tables of data (which are not so uncommon, but appear is fewer than 50% of official practice exam books, e.g. not in IELTS 18 but in IELTS 17)
  • The topics are fairly typical for IELTS (environment, travel, etc)

Peculiarities

  • The line graph has more lines than usual, with few similarities between those lines
  • The flowchart is drawn as quite a stylistic picture, which is unusual and makes it more difficult to analyse and summarise
  • The description of the flowchart doesn’t quite match the actual flowchart (as it says production but it is more of a cycle)
  • The process is a circle/ cycle (which is unusual, though not unique), making it difficult to know where to split into two paragraphs
  • There is no future data (which is in IELTS 18, 17 and 16, but before then only appears once every couple of books)
  • Two locations are switched on the map (which is unusual, so students might not have seen useful language for)

IELTS 19 Academic Writing Task 2

Typical aspects

  • The two most common question types (“To what extent…?” and “Discuss both these views and…”) are both included, plus the reasonably common “positive or negative development” question type
  • No new question types or unique combinations of questions/ All fairly typical and traditional Writing Task 2 question types with just one exception (one exception per book being fairly average, see below for details).
  • The most common topics of society, work and business, psychology and education are included, along with the reasonably common topic of the environment.

Peculiarities

  • No cause, effect and/ or solutions questions (which are not in all books but come up on average about once per book, and are very common in IELTS preparation materials)
  • One “Do you agree or disagree?” question, which has only been in one other book and would be better/ easier as “To what extent…?”
  • The rare topics of finance and food are included.

Analysis of IELTS 19 Speaking

IELTS 19 Speaking Part 1

Typical aspects

  • Most tests have a mix of at least two of present, past and future/ theoretical questions
  • A couple of questions are more general questions about the world like Part Three (which is strangely quite common in Part 1)
  • The topics are mostly quite specific examples of common topics (e.g. “international food” as a more specific topic on the generally popular topic of “food”)
  • One topic is quite specific, strange and different to previous tests (which tends to happen and be mixed up with the more familiar topics just mentioned)

Peculiarities

  • One test only has present questions (which is very rare and makes it too easy, and too difficult to show a range of language in their answers)

IELTS 19 Speaking Part 2

Typical aspects

  • Candidates have to describe a single thing
  • The tasks have a mixture of things, places and people
  • All four tasks are about the past, like the vast majority of previous tasks
  • The specific questions/ subtopics are fairly common (“how”, etc)

Peculiarities

  • Two of the four tasks are about topics that have no personal connection apart from being in the same country (whereas almost all previous tasks have been about “you” or “your”), meaning that general knowledge is necessary to answer the questions
  • Part Two is usually on a personal topic of the kind that could well appear in Speaking Part 1 in another test, which is then made more general in Speaking Part 3. However, in this book the topic of law in one task means opinions language is needed from Speaking Part 2
  • All four tasks will be difficult to think of suitable topics for many candidates, which is a fairly common difficulty but never in 100% of tasks in one book
  • Two tasks have two questions on one line and so five things to talk about instead of the usual four (which happens sometimes, but rarely twice in one book)
  • There are none of the tricky specific questions that fairly often appear like “what… like” and “how + adjective”
  • If candidates can quickly think of a suitable topic, these more general and more difficult tasks should produce higher-level language than is usual in Speaking Part Two

IELTS 19 Speaking Part 3

Typical aspects

  • Fairly typical question stems
  • Specific topics that are part of generally common topics, as in the topic “laws and rules”, which is part of the common topic of society
  • Fairly common possible difficulties such as questions that could produce simple lists if candidates aren’t careful, unfamiliar vocabulary in one or two questions, abstract topics, and less than obvious links to the Speaking Part Two task that Part Three is supposed to follow on from

Peculiarities

  • None (both because I have no complaints about this part of IELTS 19, and because Speaking Part Three has a lot of variation normally so it’s difficult to generalise)

As it says above, these points are all based on my detailed analyses of official Listening papers, etc. Those analyses by topic are available on my Teaching IELTS Articles page, and I’ll make a list of just those in the next post.

Posted in IELTS | Comments Off on Analysis of IELTS Academic 19

My new favourite picture books for EFL young learners

A list and descriptions of some books I’ve recently found have really worked with two to twelve year olds, mostly titles I didn’t know when I made my original list of The Best Picture Books for EFL Young Learners and What to Do with Them, plus a couple that have gone up in my estimation. Comments on these and possible additions below please.

Where Does It Go by Margaret Miller (amusing wrong positions of things and the best picture book I’ve found for the slightly higher prepositions “in front of”, “behind” and “between”)

Baby’s Day by Karen Katz (fun moving the baby from activity to activity and turning over to show awake and asleep, tying in well with routines and action songs like Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush)

Bye Bye Bear from Cartwheel Books (more of a puppet, but the pages on its stomach mean that it fits in well with story time, you just need to add related songs such as If You’re Happy and You Know It and Open Shut Them to make it last long enough)

You Choose Colouring Book by Nick Sharratt and Pippa Goodhart (students choose what clothes, pet, etc they want then can colour them in, good for just “want” or “would like”, or the original text has second conditional and related uses of “would” for hypothetical choices)

Once Upon a Time by Nick Sharratt (fun enough just to do for the vocabulary, or has Past Simple and Past Continuous for tweens who are studying those points)

Animal Alphabet by Alex Lluch (students guess the animal from the first letter and more and more of the picture as the door is slowly slid open, with the inevitable useless vocabulary to cover tricky letters like X, but you can easily speed past them)

No Biting by Karen Katz (fun for students to see the bad behaviour and try to guess the good versions, in my classes always changed to be with negative imperatives like “Don’t bite your friend”)

Do Cars Fly? from DK (the most fun book I’ve found for transport vocabulary, with the bonus of useful action words like “fly”)

Toes, Ears and Nose by Marion Dane Bauer and Karen Katz (a fun combination of body and clothes vocabulary, just need to simplify “elbow” to “arm”, etc)

Eat Your Peas by Kes Gray and Nick Sharratt (a real student favourite and can easily simplify the language, and the fact that the only language that links to my syllabuses is “I don’t like peas” at least makes that model sentence very memorable)

I’m the Biggest Thing in the Ocean by Kevin Sherry (very amusing comparative and superlative practice, with illustrations and a story that aren’t too childish and so should work with kids who are studying that level of language, plus sea life vocabulary)

Are Elephants Tiny? from DK (great interactive practice of opposites, but you probably want to simply vocabulary such as “huge” at this level and age)

Chicken Bedtime is Really Early (students studying times with “o’clock” can usually only find the hidden clocks in the pictures and say the names of the animals, but the text has a nice rhythm and is short enough that students can enjoy it without needing to understand very much, and the illustrations work at every age)

Honourable mentions

The Queen’s Hat by Steve Antony (wonderful story with fun spotting things challenge for the students, but for the very specific top of prepositions of movement)

The Gingerbread Man illustrated by Linda Jeffery (also for prepositions of movement, this time with a fun TPR activity of putting the gingerbread man through holes in the page)

Pass the Parcel by Annie Kubler and Sue Baker (a great way of making shapes fun and interactive and adding animals as another language point, but it would work better if your students know the original pass the parcel game and the idea that elephants are scared of mice. The later pages have tricky vocabulary like “octagon”, but students are usually ready to just open the flaps and turn the pages by that point anyway)

Small Smaller by Corina Fletcher and Natalie Marshall (making drilling comparative and superlative fun with sliding pages, but probably too childish for most students studying this language)

Big Bigger Biggest Adventure by Kate Banks and Paul Yalowitz (comparative and superlative in quite a fun story with a real ending and fairly easy to simplify, but a bit long for my classes)

Shark in the Park by Nick Sharratt (my students love it and it’s the book they most often start chanting along to, but difficult to link to any language point except it has a little bit of “There’s” and prepositions of movement)

Posted in Materials, pre-school/ kindergarten/ very young learners, Teaching young learners | Comments Off on My new favourite picture books for EFL young learners

New TEFLtastic photocopiables on almost everything coming soon

A mere 18 years into the history of TEFLtastic, I have finally found time to have an actual plan for new PDFs so that there will be a good mix of topics as the months go by. Instead of yet more IELTS stuff, you can therefore look forward to much more on other exams, grammar, biz and ESP, functional language, social English, writing, EAP, pronunciation, vocabulary, numbers and times, etc. They’ll be added every couple of days to my Latest and Greatest on TEFLtastic post and my Classroom Materials pages.

Posted in Photocopiable worksheets, Teaching English as a Foreign Language | Comments Off on New TEFLtastic photocopiables on almost everything coming soon

My top selling e-books of 2024/2025

A sales ranking, then some musings on what it might mean:

  1. Teaching Social English: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Ed
  2. Teaching C2 Proficiency: Interactive Classroom Activities
  3. Teaching IELTS Writing: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Ed
  4. Teaching IELTS Speaking: Interactive Classroom Activities
  5. Teaching IELTS Listening: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Ed
  6. Teaching Negotiating: Interactive Classroom Activities
  7. Teaching Meetings: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Ed

The most noticeable thing for me is that my emailing book has dropped out of the top sellers and my telephoning books have continued their decline – perhaps because these traditional business skills are becoming less important and/ or less standardised?

On the good news front, the success of my CPE book perhaps shows that this small market has become so underserved by big publishers that it is now a niche worth filling.

More surprising for me, having second editions hasn’t had as much impact as I’d expected. I’d imagined that seeing that a book has gone to second edition would prove that it had enough popularity and staying power to be worth a try, but apparently not… On the other hand, that means first editions have more staying power than I thought they would (though that is unlikely to stop me polishing them up).

Posted in ELT publishing, Photocopiable worksheets | Comments Off on My top selling e-books of 2024/2025

What is my IELTS innovation?

I’m thinking about applying for the IELTS Morgan Terry Memorial IATEFL Scholarship*, as it’s for innovation in IELTS and I’m sure I must have managed an innovation or two in over 1000 pages of photocopiables and 29 articles on IELTS. However, not having read a teacher’s book since halfway through my CELTA 30 years ago, I have no idea how anyone else is teaching IELTS and so not sure how the way I have come up with for my students might be different. Possible candidates:

– extremely detailed analyses of official practice tests and materials based on those analyses, so students get representative preparation and practice

– games which are intensive practice of vital language and/ or tactics for IELTS, not just warmers

– pronunciation practice which is closely tied to how students really need it to understand the listening and speaking questions, but which also give them an introduction to what they could cover in their pronunciation and listening practice more generally

– pairwork for IELTS prep that is usually done alone, as much as possible in ways which are both more motivating and more useful

Any idea which of those might be innovative and/ or impressive? Or any other possibilities? Or perhaps an innovation I can make in the next two weeks??

*Thanks to the person who shared a link to the scholarship on LinkedIn – sorry forgot to make a note of who it was

Posted in IELTS | 2 Comments

The best IELTS Listening practice test?

An IELTS Listening practice test wish list, then two candidates for the prize.

The perfect IELTS Listening test would have:

  • Part One in which one of the two speakers would naturally be taking notes such as someone joining an employment agency
  • Part One with one thing spelt out (preferably something that is not in a dictionary like a family name, with typical phrases for spelling like “Is that…?”)
  • Part One with at least one number to write, with a variety of different kinds of numbers if there are two or more
  • Part One split into two parts as it changes from “One word only” to “One word and/ or a number”, or vice versa
  • Part Two with one speaker (or just a very quick introduction by another speaker)
  • Part Two with a map
  • Few or no typical IELTS trick questions like “… used to be next to… but now…” in Part Two map tasks
  • Part Three with two or three speakers, in a typical situation in this part like a university tutor/ supervisor and students
  • Part Three in which the candidate has to understand if the speakers are agreeing or disagreeing (such as two students discussing planning a presentation together with a who-said-what task)
  • Part Four that is a 101 academic lecture that doesn’t need any specialist knowledge (as most of these parts are)
  • Part Four with “One word only” all the way through, or possibly “One word and/ or number” for one of the two parts
  • Part Four with language related to Writing Task 2 such as cause and effect, or problems and solutions
  • Over the whole test, no repeated tasks apart from gapfill (so one group of multiple-choice questions, different kinds of matching tasks, etc)
  • All sections are split into two with a pause, most or all at obvious places such as a change of page, task and/ or topic
  • A range of different gapfill answers (plural nouns, singular nouns, uncountable nouns, different kinds of numbers, adjectives, etc)
  • Wrong options in multiple choice, matching tasks etc mostly mentioned but not correct because of a range of different reasons (different subject, phrases like “… used to… but…”, etc), but also sometimes not mentioned at all
  • Lots of good examples of typical phrases in IELTS Listening like checking/ clarifying, agreeing and disagreeing, signposting, and showing that answers are wrong or right

It would also be nice to have a flowchart in Part 3 to tie in with Writing Task 1, even though that would mean even more gapfill tasks. It wouldn’t hurt to have one gapfill task that asks for more than one word such as “no more than three words”, in case that is still part of the exam (despite not having been in the official Cambridge practice exams for ages). Part Four with no split also wouldn’t be too bad, as it least it adds some variety and shows the need to listen very carefully to the instructions.

And the test that most matches that list of the ones I’ve analysed so far is (drumroll):

Cambridge IELTS 16 Test 4

with IELTS 18 Test 2 as a reasonably close runner up.

Any other candidates?

For over 350 pages of more fun IELTS Listening materials, see here.

Updated 13 May 2025

Posted in IELTS, Listening | Comments Off on The best IELTS Listening practice test?

My most debated and commented on articles

Not quite a representative sample of my articles that people have taken most interest in (as most don’t have a comments function), but a mix of ones with strong opinions that you could join the debate on and ones with lots of nice comments that might mean they are well worth reading:

Fun Activities for the Second Conditional BIG DEBATE!

15 Reasons to Avoid a TEFL Course BIG DEBATE

15 Cultural Differences in the Korean Classroom BIG DEBATE

Pronunciation Problems for Spanish-Speaking Learners of English

How to Cut Out or Limit L1 Use in Class

Important Cultural Differences in the Classroom

15 Fun Activities for Present Simple/ Present Continuous

15 Fun Present Perfect Activities

15 Fun Games for the Present Continuous

15 Top Fun Pronunciation Games

15 Ways to Correct Spoken Errors

Past Continuous Activities

How to Teach English for Architects

20 Fun Ways to Teach Kids Body Vocab

15 Classroom Language Games

15 Ways to Adapt a Textbook with Too Much Stuff in it

Speaking Games for (False) Beginners

Posted in Teaching English as a Foreign Language | Comments Off on My most debated and commented on articles

The most TEFLtastic new content of summer 2024

While you’ve all been off spoiling Venice, Kyoto and Barcelona on your hols all summer, I’ve been keeping up a steady stream of new content that you’ve probably missed while you were tanning your belly buttons, reading Dan Brown and sipping Blue Nun. So, here is my first update in quite a while, with my personal favourites top:

Countable and uncountable foods happy families card game

Adverbs of frequency mastermind

Present and past abilities dice games

How to teach will for spontaneous intentions 

Teaching three students problems and solutions

Groups of three in pairwork activities

8 fun gradable and extreme adjectives controlled practice activities

Kremlin watching in ELT

Are my e-books too cheap?

How to teach short and long vowel sounds 

10 fun short and long vowels practice activities

Teaching IELTS Listening: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Edition 

Teaching IELTS Writing: Interactive Classroom Activities 2nd Edition 

Speaking English problems and solutions 

Reading in English problems and solutions

Passive voice key word sentence transformations

Verbs and adverbs of frequency bluff

How to teach verb patterns 

Connected speech in Financial English collocations

Family gift suggestions: ‘too’ and ‘enough’ practice

How to teach adjective and preposition collocations 

11 adjective plus prepositions games 

HR options discussion

Discussing the future of HR

How to write informal IELTS letters

Financial English minimal pairs

Emailing on HR topics practice

How to interrupt in English

How to respond to thanks in English

IELTS Writing Task Two tasks on feelings

9 IELTS informal letter model answers

IELTS Reading homework instructions and reflection

How to pronounce voiced and unvoiced consonant pairs

Posted in Photocopiable worksheets | Comments Off on The most TEFLtastic new content of summer 2024

Kremlin-watching in ELT publishing and exams

When I have to explain the English teaching industry, I often feel like a Kremlinologist must have when they had to make assumptions about deeper changes from who the party leader was standing next to, or like a journalist trying to make a whole article based on the evidence of a photo of Kim Jong Un pointing at things. For example, when I had to explain why the answer keys were so inaccurate, I guessed from the names on the covers that the Teacher’s Book writer was probably falling into traps that Student’s Book author had set for the students. Similarly, I often have to apologise with “Sorry that we have to cover this topic, but it looks like the publishers used up all the normal topics in the earlier levels of this textbook series”.

Finding patterns in tealeaves is most important when teaching and writing about IELTS. Cambridge exams like B2 First rarely have changes, with such alterations clearly explained and the exam predictable from then on. Somehow Cambridge has not decided to go through the same kind of clear process with IELTS. Instead, we are forced to search through the official Cambridge IELTS practice test books for subtle signs of how the exam might be secretly changing. To give one of numerous examples, I’ve never seen an announcement that IELTS Listening gapfill tasks will no longer have two or more words per gap, but there haven’t been any examples since IELTS 12 in 2017. I therefore have to tell my students that the exam is unlikely to be like the “no more than three words” task in the textbook, but could still be – because who knows?? Similarly, Cambridge no longer sells books earlier than IELTS 12, but it’s not obvious what changes there had been that mean earlier materials are no longer suitable, especially when IELTS 17 and 18 are quite a lot different from IELTS 12 and 13.  

My most recent example of TEFL Kremlin watching is that I just got my hands on a copy of the new Cambridge IELTS 19 official practice exams book. I’ve therefore been trying to work out what recent trends in IELTS tests it reinforces, what further changes might be starting, and what is just examples of clumsy writing and editing (like in all the Cambridge IELTS books) and so can safely be ignored. Results of that analysis coming soon. In the meantime, here is the first of what I hope will be a complete set of articles on what we can and can’t learn from “official” IELTS practice exam books:

Analysis of official IELTS informal letter tasks 

Posted in ELT publishing, IELTS | 2 Comments