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Present Simple & Present Continuous for IELTS Band 6: Mastering Everyday and Ongoing Actions

This comprehensive guide is tailored specifically for IELTS Band 6 candidates. It provides you with clear explanations, practical usage examples, common mistakes to avoid, real IELTS contexts, and a range of practice activities and strategies. By the end of this article, you will be equipped to handle a wide variety of questions in both the Speaking and Writing sections, especially those related to describing routines, experiences, and ongoing actions. Present Simple & Present Continuous for IELTS Band 6: Mastering Everyday and Ongoing Actions - LingExam Language Academy - Lingexam.com

Present Simple & Present Continuous – Ultimate IELTS Band 6 Guide

Present Simple & Present Continuous for IELTS Band 6: The Ultimate Guide for Speaking and Writing Success

Introduction: Why Mastering Present Simple & Present Continuous is Essential for IELTS Band 6

When aiming for IELTS Band 6 in Speaking and Writing, one of the most important grammar foundations you need is a clear understanding of the present simple and present continuous tenses. These two verb forms are used constantly—when describing your daily routine, talking about what you or others are doing right now, expressing preferences, or explaining changes and temporary situations. Without mastering these tenses, your ability to communicate clearly in real-life and exam settings will be limited. This comprehensive guide will walk you through all key rules, common mistakes, real IELTS scenarios, and offer extensive practice to help you secure Band 6 and beyond. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Table of Contents

What is Present Simple? Definition, Rules, and Usage

Understanding the Present Simple

The present simple tense is used to talk about facts, routines, habits, general truths, and repeated actions. It’s the foundation for expressing what happens “all the time” or on a regular basis. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Common Use Cases:
  • Daily routines: “I wake up at 7 a.m.”
  • Permanent situations: “She lives in London.”
  • General truths: “The sun rises in the east.”
  • Habits and repeated actions: “He plays football every Saturday.”
  • Instructions or directions: “You turn left at the corner.”
  • Feelings, likes, and dislikes: “I like pizza.”
Present Simple: Structure
Affirmative:

Subject + base verb (+ s/es for he/she/it)

Examples:
“I study English.”
“He watches TV.”


Negative:

Subject + do/does not + base verb

Examples:
“I do not (don’t) study French.”
“She does not (doesn’t) like coffee.”


Question:

Do/Does + subject + base verb?

Examples:
“Do you play football?”
“Does she work here?”

Spelling Note:
  • Add -es to verbs ending in -ch, -sh, -ss, -x, or -o (e.g., watches, washes, goes).
  • For verbs ending in consonant + y, change y to i and add -es (e.g., studies).
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What is Present Continuous? Definition, Rules, and Usage

Understanding the Present Continuous

The present continuous tense (also called present progressive) describes actions happening now, around now, or temporary situations. It’s vital for speaking about what is “in progress” or changing. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Common Use Cases:
  • Actions happening now: “I am reading this article.”
  • Temporary situations: “My cousin is living with us this month.”
  • Trends or changes: “More people are using smartphones.”
  • Annoying habits (with ‘always’): “He is always leaving the door open.”
  • Describing a picture: “The man is wearing a red shirt.”
Present Continuous: Structure
Affirmative:

Subject + am/is/are + verb-ing

Examples:
“I am learning English.”
“They are watching TV.”


Negative:

Subject + am/is/are + not + verb-ing

Examples:
“She isn’t coming to the party.”
“We aren’t working today.”


Question:

Am/Is/Are + subject + verb-ing?

Examples:
“Are you studying?”
“Is he sleeping?”

Spelling Notes:
  • Drop the final e before adding -ing (make → making).
  • Double the final consonant for CVC words (run → running). :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
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Key Differences: Present Simple vs. Present Continuous

Understanding the contrast between these tenses is critical for IELTS success. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Usage Present Simple Present Continuous
Routine / Habit “I go to work every day.”
Action now “I am working now.”
General Truth “Water boils at 100 °C.”
Temporary Action “I am living in London this summer.”
Annoying Habit “He always loses his keys.” “He is always losing his keys.”
Future Arrangement ✗ (except timetables) “I am meeting my friend tomorrow.”
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Why These Tenses Matter for IELTS Band 6

Relevance for IELTS Speaking

In Speaking Part 1, you’ll describe your daily life, family, and hobbies (present simple). You’ll also need to react to pictures or talk about current situations (present continuous). :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Relevance for IELTS Writing

For Writing Task 1, you might describe data about current trends or routines, especially dynamic charts. In Task 2, expressing general opinions (present simple) versus recent changes (present continuous) helps convey your meaning accurately. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Full Grammar Guide: Forms, Patterns, and Exceptions

1  Verb “To Be” vs. Auxiliary “Do/Does”

The present simple uses do / does for negatives and questions, while the present continuous uses the present forms of be (am / is / are) plus -ing. Confusing these auxiliaries is one of the most common Band-6 blocking errors.

At-a-Glance Pattern Table
Sentence Type Present Simple Present Continuous
Affirmative S + Vbase (+-s) S + am/is/are + V-ing
Negative S + do/does not + Vbase S + am/is/are not + V-ing
Yes/No Question Do/Does + S + Vbase? Am/Is/Are + S + V-ing?
Wh- Question Wh + do/does + S + Vbase…? Wh + am/is/are + S + V-ing…?
2  Stative Verbs Rule

Stative verbs like know, love, believe, understand, belong do not normally appear in the continuous form. Saying “✗ I am knowing him” is incorrect. Use present simple: “I know him.”

3  Spelling & Pronunciation Exceptions
  • Go → goes (adds -es even though the base ends in vowel + o)
  • Lie → lying (drop e, but keep i)
  • Travel → travelling/traveling (double l in UK spelling but not always in US)
Pronunciation Tip:

The -s ending in present simple has three sounds: /s/ (books), /z/ (plays), /ɪz/ (watches). Pronouncing these correctly can boost your Speaking score.

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20+ Real-Life and IELTS Usage Situations

The following table shows practical contexts where each tense is essential. Review and notice how the correct choice affects clarity and coherence.

# Situation Preferred Tense Example Sentence
1 Introducing yourself in Part 1 Present Simple “I work as a software engineer.”
2 Describing a chart trend (Task 1) Present Continuous “The number of users is rising steadily.”
3 Giving a recipe / instructions Present Simple “First, you add the flour.”
4 Talking about a temporary job Present Continuous “I am working at a café for the summer.”
5 Expressing likes/dislikes Present Simple “She doesn’t like spicy food.”
6 Complaining about an annoying habit Present Continuous + “always” “He is always leaving dirty dishes.”

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Incorrect: “✗ She is work in a bank.”
Correct: “✓ She works in a bank.”

Explanation: We use present simple for permanent jobs, not “be + V-ing”.

Incorrect: “✗ He don’t like football.”
Correct: “✓ He doesn’t like football.”

Explanation: With he/she/it, use doesn’t + base verb.

Incorrect: “✗ I am knowing the answer.”
Correct: “✓ I know the answer.”

Explanation: Know is a stative verb—avoid continuous form.

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Strategies and Tips to Master These Tenses

Strategy 1  –  Use Time Markers

Signal words like always, every, usually point to present simple, while now, at the moment, currently cue present continuous. Listening for (or adding) these markers improves accuracy instantly.

Strategy 2  –  Think About Permanence

Ask, “Is this action/condition permanent or temporary?” Permanent = present simple (“She lives in Rome”). Temporary = present continuous (“She is living in Rome this semester”).

Strategy 3  –  Drill with Personal Examples

Write 5 sentences about your daily routine (present simple) and 5 sentences about what you are doing right now or this week (present continuous). Personalization consolidates memory.

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Practical Exercises: Gap-Fills, Transformations, Mini-Tasks

Exercise 1  –  Gap-Fill (Type Your Answer)

Complete with present simple or present continuous. Type only one word.

1.  My sister ____ (work) at a bank this year.
Exercise 2  –  Sentence Transformation

Rewrite the sentence using the tense in brackets.

2.  “I study French.” (present continuous)

10 Advanced Practice Questions (with Answers & Explanations)

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Self-Assessment Checklist

Tick each box honestly: If you can tick at least 8 items, you are ready for Band 6 use of these tenses!

7-Step Study Plan for Fluency

  1. Day 1: Review this guide and re-write 10 personal routine sentences in present simple.
  2. Day 2: Keep a “live diary” for 24 h—note what you are doing every 3 hours.
  3. Day 3: Record yourself describing a picture (1 min) with present continuous. Play back, self-correct.
  4. Day 4: Complete 20 mixed-tense gap-fills (download from LingExam). Check with answer key.
  5. Day 5: Do one IELTS Speaking Part 1 mock. Focus on tense accuracy. Get feedback.
  6. Day 6: Watch a news clip. Pause every 15 s and describe what is happening.
  7. Day 7: Retake the Comprehensive End-of-Article Quiz below and compare results.

Additional Exercises for Accuracy & Comprehension

Exercise 3  –  Multiple Selection

Select all correct sentences.

Which sentences are correct?
Exercise 4  –  Error Spotting (Drag or Tap)

Tap the word that makes the sentence incorrect.

He don’t like broccoli.

Comprehensive End-of-Article Quiz

Ready to prove your mastery? The system will randomly pick 10 questions from our 30-question bank each attempt. Score 8/10 (80 %) to pass. You can retake as many times as you like—new questions every round!

0 / 10 answered

Press “Start Quiz” to begin!

References & Further Reading

  • Cambridge University Press. English Grammar in Use, 5th ed.
  • British Council. “Present tense.” Retrieved from learnenglish.britishcouncil.org
  • Swan, M. Practical English Usage, 4th ed., Oxford University Press.
  • IELTS.org. “Speaking Band Descriptors.” www.ielts.org
  • LingExam Academy. “Present Simple vs. Present Continuous – Full Lesson.” (Original article). :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Encouragement & Next Steps

🌟 Great effort! Remember, every practice session brings you closer to fluency. Keep reviewing your mistakes, use English daily, and celebrate small wins. You’ve got this! 💪

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