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Analysis of official IELTS General Writing Task 1 informal letter tasks

Analysis of official IELTS General Writing Task 1 informal letter tasks

Descriptions of the situations, functional language, number of points to cover etc included in the eleven official IELTS GT Writing letter tasks that clearly need casual/ informal/ friendly language.

This is a detailed analysis of all 11 IELTS GT Writing Task 1 letter tasks published in official Cambridge IELTS exam practice books which clearly need to be informal letters. It starts with a summary of how the tasks are similar to and different from each other, then there is a table going through each task in detail. This is designed to help make exam practice reflect the real test, prioritise what to study, and search for suitable exam practice materials. Tasks where different levels of formality are possible will be dealt with in articles. Over 500 pages of photocopiable material for IELTS General and IELTS Academic preparation are available at https://www.usingenglish.com/e-books/ielts-writing/

 

Summary of official IELTS General Writing Task 1 letter tasks

Kinds of letter and who to

  • 6 out of 11 tasks are definitely replies to letters
  • All 11 clearly informal letters are to friends
  • Especially recently, most of the informal letters include some kind of giving advice, with the only other repeated situation being giving updates on your life (x2).

 

Functions in the body of the letter

  • In almost all tasks, the writer will need to explain/ describe/ give information (though there is not much language that can used in more than one of these situations, so that isn’t a very useful function to think about/ to teach)
  • In 8 out of 11 letters, the writer needs to give a reason or reasons (and that is possible in almost all tasks)
  • In 5 or 6 tasks, the writer needs to suggest/ advise/ recommend
  • In 3 or 4 tasks, the writer needs to invite or respond to an invitation
  • In 2 tasks, the writer needs to say something negative such as explaining negative points or giving bad news
  • In 1 task, the writer needs to make a request
  • In 1 task, the writer needs to arrange something such as a meeting someone
  • In 1 task, the writer has to thank the reader (and thanking can also be used in many other tasks)
  • In 1 task, the writer has to give good news

 

Things to cover in each bullet point

  • 4 out of 11 tasks have two points or a plural in one of the three bullet points, meaning that there are more than three points to cover in the three body paragraphs

 

Recent trends in IELTS General Writing Task 1 letter tasks

  • Replying to a letter has become more common recently
  • Advice seems to have become more common recently
  • Since 2020 (and in three out of four tests in 2019), all the tasks could (and usually should) be written in clearly formal style or clearly informal/ casual/ friendly style, with no need for medium-formality letters (meaning that the candidate can quickly decide on the right level of formality, and can use either formal written language or idiomatic language to impress the examiner)

 

Oddities

  • There have been two tasks that ask for an “email” in the most recent official practice test books. However, all the official information from IELTS, IDP, etc only says “letter”, so this must be a mistake.

 

Year-by-year detailed analysis of official IELTS GT Writing Task 1 informal letters

The columns below show the test and the year it was published, if this letter is clearly a reply to another letter etc or not, who you must write to, the general sort of letter that is needed, how you are told to start it, what functional language phrases are needed in the body of the letter, and if more than three points need to be covered in the body. An exclamation mark in brackets (!) means a surprising point like things which are different in all the other tests.

Year Book/ Test

Reply?

Who to

Situation/ Kind of letter

Open

Functions needed

Plurals or two points in one bullet?

2022 17/1

probably, but could be after a call etc

friend

email(!) advice on sports

Dear…,

advice, suggest, maybe invite

no

2021

16/ 4

yes

friend

email(!) advice on finding a place to live where you studied

Dear…,

describe, recommend, warn/ advise

mistakes

2020

15/ 1

yes

friend

advice on camping

Dear…,

explain/ reason(s), negative points, respond to invitation

possible

dis-

advantages

 

2020

15/ 3

yes

friend

advice about studying your subject

Dear…,

describe, reason(s), advice

no

2018

13/ 4

yes

friend

answer about a job in your country

Dear…,

give info, reason(s), explain

no

2016

11/ 1

yes

friend

advice on what to do after school

Dear…,

reason(s), suggest

types of job

2015

10/ A

no

friend

ask for help getting a job

Dear…,

explain/ describe, request

no

2011

8/ A

no

friend

life update after moving home

Dear…,

reason(s), describe, invite

no

2009

7/ A

no

friend

life update on your change of job

Dear…,

reason(s), describe, good news, bad news

no

2009

7/ B

yes

friend

thanks for photos and invite

Dear…,

thanks, reasons, invite

for photos and holiday

2005

4/ B

no

friend

try to sell furniture to them

Dear…,

reason(s), describe, suggest/ arrange

no

 

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