IELTS-1

IELTS at A Glance

IELTS stands for International English Language Testing System which was established and launched since 1989. There are five major stakeholders or organisations which are actively and closely working with the IELTS development and promotion worldwide: Cambridge Assessment English, British Council, IELTS Australia and the IDP [(International (Development Program) Education Specialist)]. It was basically established to diagnose the English language proficiency for people who would like to emigrate to English-speaking countries for academic and residential or professional pursuance. In other words, IELTS, like the PTE is like a gateway for these people to meet their aspirations of enrolling in a university of their choice or work and reside in where English is the lingua franca like the UK, Australia, the USA, Canada, New Zealand, and even other European nations which receive international students and permanent residents.
Presently, there are over 1200 IELTS centres including the USA which has over 50 centres alone. Annually, IELTS tests are conducted for 48 different dates all over the world.
IELTS is basically set for two categories of people  those who go to these countries either for higher studies  or those who want to join professional organizations, and those who go to these English-speaking countries as workers, trainees or permanent residents. It is usually a paper-based test but recently they have introduced Computer-delivered IELTS in as well only in some countries now. This C-IELTS processes the examinations and the results in nearly half the time the paper-based test has been taking. The scores for C-IELTS are ready in 5-7 days’ time while the paper-based takes about 13 days.
Format-wise, there are two categories of IELTS, viz. Academic IELTS is meant for the students who apply for higher studies to these foreign colleges and universities, and General IELTS meant for those who go to these countries in pursuance of their professions and as permanent residents.
Each format tests all the four skills of English language that include the receptive skills like listening and reading and productive skills like speaking and writing. A total of 40 marks questions are asked in each of these language skills which are later both individually and collectively converted into a band of 9 as the maximum marks. An average of 7 to 9 bands are more likely to get considered in foreign colleges and universities.
Let us see these formats in a table to get things even more precisely.
ACADEMIC TEST
GENERAL TRAINING TEST
Receptive Skills
Productive Skills
Receptive Skills
Productive Skills
Reading Skill Test
40 marks
Time: 60 minutes
Writing Skill Test
40 marks
Time: 60 minutes
Reading skill Test
40 marks
Time: 60 minutes
Writing Skill Test
40 marks
Time: 60 minutes
Listening Skill Test
40 marks 
(30+10)
40 Qns.
Time: 40 minutes
Speaking Skill Test
Separately conducted within 7 days before  or after all other tests
40 marks
Time: 11-14 minutes
Listening Skill Test
40 marks
(30+10)
40 Qns.
Time: 40 minutes
Speaking Skill Test
Separately conducted
within 7 days before or after all other tests
40 marks
Time: 11-14 minutes
Listening and Speaking test item are the same for both the IELTS categories.
There are 40 questions worth 1 mark each in all the language skills testing except for  the Speaking Skill Test

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