IELTS Academic Writing Task 2 — Agree/Disagree
Interactive tutorial & practice
How to use this module
Open each accordion step to study concise, exam-accurate guidance with examples. Then attempt the task under timed conditions, review the model answer, and consolidate vocabulary and phrases with targeted practice.
Step 01
Decode the Agree/Disagree prompt precisely
Plan 2–3 min
Identify whether the question asks for a full agreement, partial agreement, or a clear stance with justification.
Underline instruction words like To what extent do you agree or disagree and the exact claim being evaluated.
Mark the scope of the claim so you avoid drifting into related but irrelevant areas.
Note any implicit contrasts, such as benefits versus drawbacks, that you may need to balance.
Decide early if examples will be general, research-style, or personal but academic in tone.
Spot key nouns and convert them into categories for body paragraphs.
Rewrite the claim in your own words to confirm comprehension before planning.
Check whether the topic invites policy arguments, ethical reasoning, or practical impacts.
Guard against over-generalisation by imagining at least one exception to the claim.
Commit to addressing every part of the task so Task Response is fully satisfied.
Step 02
Choose a definite position you can defend
Plan 1–2 min
Pick the stance that gives you the strongest reasons and clearest examples.
Avoid neutrality unless the prompt explicitly allows a balanced view.
State your position in one crisp sentence you can put in the thesis.
Ensure your stance lets you produce two solid, distinct body paragraphs.
Prefer arguable points over descriptive observations that cannot be debated.
Check that your stance matches the exact wording of the claim, not a nearby issue.
Sketch two reasons that are non-overlapping and logically sequenced.
Decide whether you will include a short concession to strengthen credibility.
Keep the position consistent from introduction to conclusion.
Remember: clarity beats complexity when time is limited.
Step 03
Generate reasons, mini-examples, and links
Plan 2–3 min
List three to five reasons, then select the best two for depth over breadth.
Add a quick scenario or statistic-style example to each reason.
Note how each reason connects back to the claim using because or therefore logic.
Check that examples are realistic and do not require specialist data.
Ensure one reason does not contain the other, avoiding repetition.
Draft one sentence that shows a potential counterpoint you can address.
Plan signposting transitions to guide the reader between ideas.
Keep language neutral and academic even when examples are personal.
Prioritise reasons with clear causes and measurable effects.
Discard any point that would take too long to explain under timed conditions.
Step 04
Build a clear four-paragraph outline
Plan 1–2 min
Paragraph 1: background, paraphrase of the claim, and an explicit thesis.
Paragraph 2: first reason with explanation, example, and link to thesis.
Paragraph 3: second reason with explanation, example, and brief concession.
Paragraph 4: concise conclusion that restates stance without new ideas.
Keep each paragraph tightly focused on a single controlling idea.
Allocate time roughly as 5–7–7–3 minutes for the four paragraphs.
Ensure topic sentences preview the logic of each paragraph clearly.
Place your strongest reason first to establish authority early.
Record one key phrase you will use to signal your position repeatedly.
Commit to this outline to resist mid-essay digressions.
Step 05
Write a purposeful introduction
Write 3–4 min
Paraphrase the claim using fresh structure rather than word-for-word swaps.
Avoid generic hooks and dictionary definitions that waste words.
State your position explicitly to guide the examiner immediately.
Preview two reasons in a single, compact map sentence.
Keep the introduction short so you protect time for development.
Use neutral, precise verbs to frame the debate accurately.
Check that the paraphrase preserves the original scope and nuance.
Remove filler phrases that do not add information or stance.
End the paragraph with a forward-looking thesis, not a conclusion line.
Start body paragraph one without adding an extra transition paragraph.
Step 06
Develop Body Paragraph 1 with depth
Write 6–7 min
Open with a topic sentence that states the reason and signals its logic.
Explain the mechanism by answering how and why the reason works.
Add one concrete example that feels plausible and easy to follow.
Use cause–effect linkers to connect the example to your claim.
Avoid piling multiple examples that dilute explanation time.
Employ referencing words to avoid repetition and improve cohesion.
Finish with a link-back sentence that reinforces your position.
Keep sentences varied in length but clear in structure.
Prefer precise nouns and active verbs over vague phrases.
Check for grammar slips before moving to the next paragraph.
Step 07
Develop Body Paragraph 2 with contrast or extension
Write 6–7 min
Choose a second reason that complements rather than repeats the first.
Present a topic sentence that signals a fresh angle or wider impact.
Explain the logic clearly before introducing the example.
Provide one example that illuminates the mechanism you described.
Use a short concession phrase to acknowledge a reasonable objection.
Refute the objection with a stronger principle or outcome.
Link the paragraph to the thesis using purposeful signposting.
Maintain parallel structure so the essay feels coherent and planned.
Avoid sudden shifts to new topics that belong in another essay.
Keep the tone measured, confident, and evidence-oriented.
Step 08
Use concession and rebuttal strategically
Write 2–3 min
Introduce a fair counterpoint using markers like While it is true that….
Keep the concession brief so it does not overshadow your stance.
Pivot with contrastive linkers such as however or nevertheless.
Show why your position better serves outcomes, ethics, or feasibility.
Use evidence logic, not emotion, to rebut the counterpoint.
Avoid straw-man arguments that misrepresent the other side.
Return the reader to your core reason in the link-back line.
Maintain courteous language to preserve academic tone.
Limit hedging so the conclusion still feels decisive.
Check cohesion after adding concession to keep flow smooth.
Step 09
Maximise cohesion with clear signposting
Refine 1–2 min
Use forward signposts to preview what is coming next.
Use backward linkers to connect explanations to the thesis.
Prefer specific connectors over generic moreover spam.
Repeat key nouns strategically to avoid unclear pronouns.
Replace long chains of prepositions with tighter structures.
Balance sentence openings to avoid mechanical repetition.
Check paragraph unity so every sentence serves the main idea.
Trim filler adverbs that add rhythm but no meaning.
Reserve the strongest transition for your final link-back lines.
Read a paragraph aloud in your head to test flow quickly.
Step 10
Lift Lexical Resource without risking accuracy
Refine 2–3 min
Choose precise academic verbs like facilitate, undermine, or curtail.
Use collocations that naturally pair with your topic’s key nouns.
Avoid rare words you cannot control under time pressure.
Prefer concrete nouns over abstract filler where possible.
Turn vague adjectives into measurable descriptors.
Nominalise sparingly to keep sentences readable.
Recycle a small set of high-value phrases consistently.
Maintain formal register and avoid conversational idioms.
Check for word form accuracy after quick substitutions.
Eliminate repetition by using superordinates and hyponyms wisely.
Step 11
Secure Grammar Range & Accuracy, then conclude
Finish 3–4 min
Mix complex, compound, and simple sentences for flexible control.
Keep subject–verb agreement tight when clauses get longer.
Place modifiers close to the words they describe to avoid ambiguity.
Use conditionals or concessive clauses only when they clarify logic.
Check articles, countability, and prepositions in topic phrases.
Correct tense consistency, especially when citing general truths.
Write a concise conclusion that restates stance and main reasons.
Avoid new information in the conclusion to protect coherence.
Spend the final minute removing repetition and tightening diction.
Ensure the final line sounds decisive and aligned with the thesis.
Your Agree/Disagree Task
Write a response of at least 250 words. Use the timer and the word counter. After finishing, submit via WhatsApp or Email with your details.
Task
Agree/Disagree Question
Write ≥ 250 words
Question: Some people argue that secondary schools should prioritise vocational training over academic subjects to better prepare students for the job market. To what extent do you agree or disagree?
Plan briefly, take a clear position, and support it with two well-developed reasons and specific examples. Keep your tone formal and avoid repetition.
Write
Compose your essay (live counter + 1000-word limit)
Words: 0 / 1000
Timer
Countdown & Progress
40:00
Use the standard IELTS timing (40 minutes) or set your own. The progress bar fills as time passes.
Tip: If you finish early, use the remaining minutes to check paragraph unity, grammar accuracy, and vocabulary precision.
Keep your introduction concise, develop two strong body paragraphs, and conclude decisively without adding new ideas.
Submit
Send your writing for feedback
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Fill in your details. Your message will include the question, your personal info, the word count, and your essay text.
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Model Answer
Study a band-appropriate sample and a step-by-step explanation of how it addresses task requirements, structure, and language.
Model
Band-appropriate Sample Answer
~290 words
Question: Some people argue that secondary schools should prioritise vocational training over academic subjects to better prepare students for the job market. To what extent do you agree or disagree?
It is often claimed that secondary schools ought to focus mainly on vocational pathways so that young people can move smoothly into employment. While this view recognises the value of practical skills, I believe schools should integrate robust vocational options within a strong academic core rather than prioritise one over the other.
A balanced curriculum ensures that students develop transferable abilities that the labour market consistently rewards. Literacy, numeracy and scientific reasoning underpin everything from reading technical manuals to interpreting safety data. For instance, a trainee electrician who can evaluate written specifications and calculate loads accurately is more employable than one who has only practised hand skills. Academic subjects therefore provide a common platform that allows graduates to retrain as industries evolve.
At the same time, high-quality vocational tracks make learning relevant and motivate students who learn best by doing. Work placements, industry-standard equipment and teacher partnerships with local employers can convert abstract knowledge into competence. When a hospitality student applies ratio calculations to portion control or a healthcare student links biology to infection control, the boundary between “academic” and “practical” dissolves, and attainment rises.
Admittedly, some argue that giving priority to trades would reduce youth unemployment in regions with skills shortages. However, labour markets change quickly, and over-specialisation at the age of sixteen can limit long-term prospects. Schools should therefore offer flexible pathways in which pupils can move between academic and vocational modules without penalty.
In conclusion, I disagree that vocational training should take precedence over academic subjects. The most effective preparation for work is a blended model that preserves rigorous academic foundations while embedding practical training that reflects real workplaces.
Explain
Why this response works (step-by-step)
18 concise steps
1) The introduction paraphrases the claim without distorting scope and gives a clear thesis: integrate vocational routes within an academic core (direct stance).
2) The position is maintained consistently; there is no mid-essay shift towards full agreement or full disagreement.
3) The essay follows a four-paragraph structure: intro, reason 1, reason 2 (+ concession), conclusion, which is easy to follow under exam conditions.
4) Body Paragraph 1 foregrounds transferable skills (literacy, numeracy, reasoning) as labour-market constants, directly linking to employability.
5) The electrician example operationalises the claim (specifications, load calculations) and shows cause–effect logic rather than mere description.
6) The paragraph ends with a link-back line (“academic subjects therefore…”) which reinforces the thesis and cohesion.
7) Body Paragraph 2 presents a complementary angle: relevance and motivation via applied learning, avoiding repetition of reason 1.
8) Subject-specific mini-examples (hospitality ratios, healthcare biology) demonstrate how “academic ↔ practical” integration works in practice.
9) Lexical range is controlled rather than flashy; terms like “transferable,” “industry-standard,” “over-specialisation,” and “foundations” are precise and topic-appropriate.
10) Cohesive devices are varied and purposeful (e.g., “At the same time,” “Admittedly,” “However,” “therefore”) and are not overused.
11) A short concession acknowledges the opposing view (skills shortages) to enhance plausibility and then rebuttal explains long-term risks.
12) Grammatical range includes complex clauses (concessive, relative, purpose) with accurate control of agreement, articles, and prepositions.
13) Sentence rhythm alternates between compact topic sentences and longer explanations to improve readability (fluency for the examiner).
14) Idea progression is logical: general principle → applied example → link-back; then fresh angle → examples → concession/rebuttal.
15) The conclusion restates stance without new ideas, satisfying coherence and task response requirements.
16) The register remains formal and academic; no conversational idioms or rhetorical questions distract from argumentation.
17) The essay avoids absolute claims and uses measured evaluation (“can,” “should,” “most effective”), matching an academic tone.
18) Overall, the response meets the rubric by answering the exact prompt, developing two distinct reasons, and providing specific, relevant support.
Outline
Paragraph plan you can emulate
Quick reference
Intro: Paraphrase claim → Explicit stance (integration, not prioritisation).
BP1: Transferable core (literacy, numeracy, reasoning) → technical example → link back to employability.
BP2: Relevance/motivation via practical application → two field mini-examples → brief concession + rebuttal.
Conclusion: Restate stance; recommend blended model tied to changing labour markets.
Key Vocabulary (20 items)
Open each item to see phonetics, patterns, definitions, examples, common synonyms, and typical learner mistakes.
01
vocational / UK: /vəʊˈkeɪʃənəl/ • US: /voʊˈkeɪʃənəl/ — adj.
Education & jobs
Patterns: vocational training/education/route/skills; move into a vocational pathway.
Definition: relating to practical job-focused learning aimed at specific occupations.
Example: Many pupils thrive when courses include vocational training such as carpentry or hospitality. (Meaning: job-centred study boosts engagement.)
More common synonym: job-focused, career-oriented.
Common mistakes: ❌ “vocation training” → ✅ “vocational training”; ❌ using it as a noun (“a vocational”) → ✅ adjective only.
02
curriculum / UK & US: /kəˈrɪkjʊləm/ — n. (countable)
School design
Patterns: a balanced/rigorous curriculum; integrate X into the curriculum; national curriculum.
Definition: the complete set of subjects, content, and outcomes taught in a school or course.
Example: A blended curriculum combines academic theory with supervised work experience. (Meaning: both strands are taught.)
More common synonym: syllabus (for a single course).
Common mistakes: ❌ pluralising as “curriculums” in formal registers → ✅ “curricula” (more formal) or “curriculums” (now acceptable but be consistent); ❌ “in the curriculum of” → ✅ “in the curriculum”.
03
transferable / UK: /trænzˈfɜːrəbəl/ • US: /trænsˈfɝːrəbəl/ — adj.
Skills across jobs
Patterns: transferable skills/competencies; skills transfer from A to B.
Definition: usable in many contexts or occupations rather than tied to one role.
Example: Clear writing and data literacy are transferable skills valued in most industries. (Meaning: they apply widely.)
More common synonym: portable, broadly applicable.
Common mistakes: ❌ “transferrable” (spelling) → ✅ “transferable”; ❌ using it for objects (“transferable hammer”) → it usually modifies skills/knowledge.
04
employability / UK & US: /ɪmˌplɔɪəˈbɪləti/ — n. (uncountable)
Job prospects
Patterns: enhance/undermine employability; employability skills.
Definition: the likelihood of being hired and staying employed, based on skills and attitudes.
Example: Work placements significantly improve graduates’ employability. (Meaning: they become easier to hire.)
More common synonym: job readiness; job prospects.
Common mistakes: ❌ treating it as countable (“many employabilities”) → ✅ uncountable; ❌ equating it with “employment rate” (a statistic).
05
apprenticeship / UK & US: /əˈprɛn.tɪs.ʃɪp/ — n. (countable/uncountable)
On-the-job learning
Patterns: an apprenticeship in X; enter/complete/offer an apprenticeship.
Definition: structured paid training combining work and study under supervision.
Example: A two-year apprenticeship in engineering links theory to real equipment. (Meaning: study + work together.)
More common synonym: on-the-job training (phrase).
Common mistakes: ❌ confusing with “internship” (often short/unpaid); ❌ verb “apprentice” rarely used by learners.
06
over-specialisation / UK: /ˌəʊvəˌspɛʃəlaɪˈzeɪʃən/ • US (over-specialization): /ˌoʊvərˌspɛʃələˈzeɪʃən/ — n. (uncountable)
Too narrow focus
Patterns: risk of over-specialisation; over-specialisation in a trade.
Definition: focusing so narrowly on one field that flexibility and future options are limited.
Example: Early over-specialisation can trap students if the industry declines. (Meaning: too narrow = less adaptable.)
More common synonym: excessive narrowing (phrase).
Common mistakes: ❌ missing the hyphen; ❌ using it for positive “expertise”—it carries a warning tone.
07
integration / UK: /ˌɪntɪˈɡreɪʃən/ • US: /ˌɪn.təˈɡreɪ.ʃən/ — n. (uncountable)
Combining strands
Patterns: integration of vocational elements into the curriculum; seamless integration.
Definition: combining parts so they work together as a coherent whole.
Example: Effective integration lets biology content support healthcare practice modules. (Meaning: subjects reinforce each other.)
More common synonym: combination; incorporation.
Common mistakes: ❌ “integration with the curriculum” (ok) but better in this context → ✅ “into the curriculum”.
08
pathway / UK: /ˈpɑːθweɪ/ • US: /ˈpæθweɪ/ — n. (countable)
Route through study
Patterns: academic/vocational pathway; a pathway to employment/HE.
Definition: a structured route a learner follows to reach a goal.
Example: The hospitality pathway leads from school to a Level-3 diploma and paid work. (Meaning: planned route.)
More common synonym: route; track.
Common mistakes: ❌ “way path” (redundant); ❌ using plural when referring to one programme.
09
placement / UK & US: /ˈpleɪsmənt/ — n. (countable/uncountable)
Work experience
Patterns: a work/industry placement; go on/do a placement with X.
Definition: a supervised period in a real workplace as part of study.
Example: A hospital placement helps students apply infection-control theory. (Meaning: practice in real context.)
More common synonym: internship (context-dependent).
Common mistakes: ❌ “make a placement” → ✅ “do/go on a placement”.
10
competence / UK: /ˈkɒmpɪtəns/ • US: /ˈkɑːmpɪtəns/ — n. (uncountable/countable)
Ability level
Patterns: demonstrate/assess competence in X; reach competence.
Definition: the ability to do something to an accepted standard.
Example: Learners must show competence in wiring before working unsupervised. (Meaning: proven ability.)
More common synonym: ability; capability.
Common mistakes: ❌ confusing with “competitiveness”; ❌ spelling “competancy”.
11
literacy / UK & US: /ˈlɪtərəsi/ — n. (uncountable)
Reading & writing
Patterns: digital/financial literacy; improve literacy levels.
Definition: the ability to read and write effectively (or mastery in a domain, e.g., digital).
Example: Technical manuals require strong literacy to avoid safety errors. (Meaning: reading accurately matters.)
More common synonym: reading/writing skills.
Common mistakes: ❌ treating as countable (“a literacy”); ❌ using it to mean “literature”.
12
numeracy / UK: /ˈnjuːmərəsi/ • US: /ˈnuːmərəsi/ — n. (uncountable)
Math ability
Patterns: basic/advanced numeracy; improve students’ numeracy.
Definition: the ability to work with numbers confidently.
Example: Catering students use numeracy to scale recipes accurately. (Meaning: maths for real tasks.)
More common synonym: math skills.
Common mistakes: ❌ confusing with “numeration”; ❌ writing “numericity”.
13
labour market (US: labor market) / UK: /ˈleɪbə ˈmɑːkɪt/ • US: /ˈleɪbər ˈmɑːrkɪt/ — n. phrase
Employment context
Patterns: changes in the labour market; respond to labour-market demand.
Definition: the supply of workers and the demand for labour within an economy.
Example: Schools should track labour-market trends before launching new courses. (Meaning: align training with demand.)
More common synonym: job market.
Common mistakes: ❌ hyphenation inconsistency; ❌ using “labours market”.
14
alignment / UK & US: /əˈlaɪnmənt/ — n. (uncountable/countable)
Match to needs
Patterns: alignment between courses and industry; bring X into alignment with Y.
Definition: the degree to which two things fit or work together.
Example: Strong alignment with employers increases placement quality. (Meaning: better fit, better outcomes.)
More common synonym: match; fit.
Common mistakes: ❌ “alignment to” (sometimes ok) → better: ✅ “alignment with/between”.
15
industry-standard / UK: /ˈɪndəstri ˈstændəd/ • US: /ˈɪndəstri ˈstændərd/ — adj.
Real-world tools
Patterns: industry-standard equipment/software/qualifications.
Definition: widely accepted as the normal or required level in a sector.
Example: Using industry-standard software prepares learners for day-one productivity. (Meaning: tools match workplace.)
More common synonym: widely used; standard.
Common mistakes: ❌ missing the hyphen; ❌ claiming everything is “industry-standard” without context.
16
feasibility / UK & US: /ˌfiːzəˈbɪləti/ — n. (uncountable)
Can it be done?
Patterns: assess/test the feasibility of doing X; feasibility study.
Definition: practicality—whether a plan can realistically be implemented.
Example: Before expanding labs, schools should check the feasibility of funding and staffing. (Meaning: is it practical?)
More common synonym: practicality; viability.
Common mistakes: ❌ “feasible to do” vs. “feasibility of doing” (keep pattern consistent).
17
incentive / UK & US: /ɪnˈsɛntɪv/ — n. (countable/uncountable)
Motivating factor
Patterns: provide/offer an incentive to do X; financial/non-financial incentives.
Definition: something that encourages someone to act.
Example: Paid placements create an incentive for students to complete the programme. (Meaning: payment motivates completion.)
More common synonym: motivation; reward.
Common mistakes: ❌ “incentive for do” → ✅ “incentive to do”.
18
stakeholder / UK: /ˈsteɪkˌhəʊldə/ • US: /ˈsteɪkˌhoʊldər/ — n. (countable)
Interested party
Patterns: key/local stakeholders; engage/consult stakeholders.
Definition: people or groups affected by or able to affect a decision.
Example: Colleges should consult stakeholders before changing course hours. (Meaning: include employers, parents, students.)
More common synonym: interested party (phrase).
Common mistakes: ❌ using it for shareholders only; ❌ plural form “stakeholder es”.
19
foundation / UK & US: /faʊnˈdeɪʃən/ — n. (countable/uncountable)
Basic base
Patterns: a strong foundation in maths; build/lay a foundation.
Definition: the basic knowledge or skills on which further learning depends.
Example: Numeracy provides the foundation for safe electrical work. (Meaning: basics support later tasks.)
More common synonym: basis; groundwork.
Common mistakes: ❌ “foundation of maths” → ✅ “foundation in maths”.
20
retrain / UK & US: /ˌriːˈtreɪn/ — v.
Learn again
Patterns: retrain as X; help workers retrain; government-funded retraining.
Definition: to learn new skills so you can do a different job.
Example: Academic foundations make it easier to retrain when industries change. (Meaning: basics support switching careers.)
More common synonym: reskill (v.); retraining (n.).
Common mistakes: ❌ “retrain to be” is fine, but keep preposition with nouns → ✅ “retraining as a nurse”.
Crucial Phrases & Expressions (20 items)
Practical academic phrases to express stance, contrast viewpoints, and signpost arguments clearly.
01
to what extent / UK: /tə ˌwɒt ɪkˈs tent/ • US: /tə ˌwʌt ɪkˈstɛnt/ — discourse phrase
Framing the stance
Patterns: To what extent do you agree/disagree…; discuss to what extent X is true.
Definition: asks for a measured evaluation on a scale (fully, partly, minimally).
Example: To what extent should schools prioritise vocational routes? (Meaning: how far should this happen?)
Common synonym: how far; how much.
Common mistakes: ❌ “to which extent” → ✅ “to what extent”; avoid answering with only advantages/disadvantages—state a degree.
02
I firmly agree/disagree that… / UK: /aɪ ˈfɜːmli əˈɡriː/ • US: /aɪ ˈfɝːmli əˈɡriː/ — stance phrase
Thesis clarity
Patterns: I firmly/partly/strongly agree/disagree that + clause.
Definition: an explicit statement of position for the thesis.
Example: I firmly disagree that vocational training should outrank academic study. (Meaning: clear, direct stance.)
Common synonym: I am convinced that…; I take the view that…
Common mistakes: ❌ hedging with “maybe/possibly” in thesis; ❌ missing “that”.
03
it is often claimed that… / UK: /ɪt ɪz ˈɒfən kleɪmd ðæt/ • US: /ɪt ɪz ˈɔːfən kleɪmd ðæt/ — reporting phrase
Introducing views
Patterns: it is often/widely/commonly claimed/argued/suggested that…
Definition: introduces a general viewpoint without citing a specific source.
Example: It is often claimed that practical skills guarantee employment. (Meaning: reporting a common belief.)
Common synonym: many contend that…
Common mistakes: ❌ “it often claims” (wrong subject); ❌ overusing passive reporting in every sentence.
04
a balanced curriculum / UK: /ə ˈbælənst kəˈrɪkjʊləm/ • US: /ə ˈbælənst kəˈrɪkjələm/ — noun phrase
Program design
Patterns: a balanced curriculum that combines X and Y; ensure/offer a balanced curriculum.
Definition: course planning that gives appropriate weight to multiple strands.
Example: Schools should provide a balanced curriculum mixing theory and placements. (Meaning: both strands included.)
Common synonym: well-rounded programme.
Common mistakes: ❌ “balance curriculum” (missing -ed); ❌ using it to mean “light workload”.
05
transferable skills / UK: /trænzˈfɜːrəbl skɪlz/ • US: /trænsˈfɝːrəbl skɪlz/ — noun phrase
Cross-job value
Patterns: develop/strengthen transferable skills; skills transfer to other roles.
Definition: abilities useful in many occupations (e.g., communication, numeracy).
Example: Literacy and data handling are transferable skills for most careers. (Meaning: widely applicable.)
Common synonym: portable skills.
Common mistakes: ❌ “transferrable” (spelling); ❌ using with single specific tool knowledge.
06
prioritise X over Y / UK: /praɪˈɒrɪtaɪz/ • US (prioritize): /praɪˈɔːrətaɪz/ — verb phrase
Comparative focus
Patterns: prioritise vocational training over academic subjects.
Definition: give greater importance to one option than another.
Example: Some argue we should prioritise trades over theory in school. (Meaning: rank trades higher.)
Common synonym: give precedence to.
Common mistakes: ❌ wrong preposition “prioritise X than Y” → ✅ “over”.
07
prepare students for the job market / UK: /prɪˈpeə ˈstjuːdənts fɔː ðə dʒɒb ˈmɑːkɪt/ • US: /prɪˈpɛr ˈstudnts fər ðə dʒɑːb ˈmɑːrkɪt/ — verb phrase
Outcome focus
Patterns: prepare learners/graduates for the job market/industry.
Definition: equip with abilities and behaviours employers need.
Example: Placements prepare students for the job market by building confidence and competence. (Meaning: readiness improves.)
Common synonym: equip students for employment.
Common mistakes: ❌ “prepare to the job market” → ✅ “for the job market”.
08
hands-on experience / UK: /ˌhændz ˈɒn ɪkˈspɪəriəns/ • US: /ˌhændz ˈɑːn ɪkˈspɪriəns/ — noun phrase
Practical exposure
Patterns: gain/provide hands-on experience in X.
Definition: direct practice using real tools, tasks, or situations.
Example: Labs offer hands-on experience that makes theory memorable. (Meaning: do, not just read.)
Common synonym: practical experience.
Common mistakes: ❌ “hand-on”; ❌ using it as a verb (“to hands-on”).
09
academic foundation(s) / UK: /ˌækəˈdɛmɪk faʊnˈdeɪʃənz/ • US: /ˌækəˈdɛmɪk faʊnˈdeɪʃənz/ — noun phrase
Core knowledge
Patterns: a strong academic foundation in maths/science.
Definition: basic theoretical knowledge supporting later learning.
Example: A solid academic foundation makes retraining easier. (Meaning: basics help future change.)
Common synonym: fundamentals; groundwork.
Common mistakes: ❌ “foundation of maths” → ✅ “foundation in maths”.
10
workplace relevance / UK & US: /ˈwɜːkpleɪs ˈrɛləvəns/ — noun phrase
Real-world fit
Patterns: increase/maintain workplace relevance; ensure content is relevant to industry.
Definition: the degree to which learning connects with real jobs.
Example: Employer input raises the workplace relevance of a course. (Meaning: better alignment.)
Common synonym: job relevance.
Common mistakes: ❌ “relevance with” → ✅ “relevance to”.
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skills shortage / UK: /skɪlz ˈʃɔːtɪdʒ/ • US: /skɪlz ˈʃɔːrtɪdʒ/ — noun phrase
Labour demand gap
Patterns: address a skills shortage in X; acute/chronic skills shortages.
Definition: not enough qualified workers in a sector.
Example: Prioritising trades may ease skills shortages in construction. (Meaning: more workers available.)
Common synonym: talent gap.
Common mistakes: ❌ “skill shortage” (singular modifier ok, but “skills shortage” is standard).
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over-specialisation at a young age / UK: /ˌəʊvə ˌspɛʃəlaɪˈzeɪʃən/ • US: /ˌoʊvər ˌspɛʃələˈzeɪʃən/ — noun phrase
Risk warning
Patterns: the risk/danger of over-specialisation at a young age.
Definition: narrowing study too early, limiting future options.
Example: Over-specialisation at a young age can trap learners if the sector declines. (Meaning: less flexibility.)
Common synonym: early narrowing.
Common mistakes: ❌ missing hyphen; ❌ using it as a positive term for “expertise”.
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integrate A into B / UK: /ˈɪntɪɡreɪt/ • US: /ˈɪnɪɡreɪt/ — verb phrase
Combining strands
Patterns: integrate vocational modules into the academic curriculum.
Definition: include one component so it functions as part of another.
Example: Schools should integrate placements into science courses. (Meaning: combine, not replace.)
Common synonym: incorporate A into B.
Common mistakes: ❌ “integrate to” → ✅ “integrate into”.
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provide a compelling case / UK: /prəˈvaɪd ə kəmˈpɛlɪŋ keɪs/ • US: /prəˈvaɪd ə kəmˈpɛlɪŋ keɪs/ — verb phrase
Argument strength
Patterns: provide/make a compelling/convincing case for/against X.
Definition: offer reasons that strongly support a position.
Example: Data on graduate pay provides a compelling case for mixed pathways. (Meaning: strong support.)
Common synonym: make a strong argument.
Common mistakes: ❌ “case for to do” → ✅ “case for doing/to do”.
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a concession and rebuttal / UK: /kənˈsɛʃən … rɪˈbʌtl/ • US: /kənˈsɛʒən … rɪˈbʌtəl/ — noun phrase
Counter-argument move
Patterns: include a concession and rebuttal to strengthen credibility.
Definition: briefly admit a fair point, then show why your stance still holds.
Example: The essay offers a concession and rebuttal about skills shortages. (Meaning: acknowledges, then answers.)
Common synonym: acknowledge and refute.
Common mistakes: ❌ turning the concession into a second stance; keep it short.
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on balance / UK: /ɒn ˈbæl.əns/ • US: /ɑːn ˈbæl.əns/ — discourse marker
Weighing up
Patterns: On balance, I agree/disagree that…
Definition: after considering arguments, giving a final judgement.
Example: On balance, a blended model best prepares learners. (Meaning: overall judgement.)
Common synonym: all things considered.
Common mistakes: ❌ using it mid-paragraph to add a small detail; it signals a global assessment.
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in the long term / UK: /ɪn ðə lɒŋ tɜːm/ • US: /ɪn ðə lɔːŋ tɝːm/ — time phrase
Time horizon
Patterns: in the short/medium/long term; long-term effects/benefits.
Definition: over an extended period rather than immediately.
Example: In the long term, broad skills protect employability. (Meaning: future outlook.)
Common synonym: over time.
Common mistakes: ❌ hyphen misuse (“in-the-long-term” as adverbial phrase—no hyphens here; use hyphen when adjectival: “long-term planning”).
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evidence suggests that… / UK & US: /ˈɛvɪdəns səˈdʒɛsts ðæt/ — reporting phrase
Support signal
Patterns: evidence suggests/shows/indicates that + clause.
Definition: introduces support based on data, studies or widespread practice.
Example: Evidence suggests that blended learning improves retention. (Meaning: there is support for this claim.)
Common synonym: research indicates that…
Common mistakes: ❌ using it to introduce personal anecdotes; keep it for generalisable support.
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a one-size-fits-all approach / UK & US: /ə ˌwʌn saɪz fɪts ˈɔːl əˈprəʊtʃ/ — idiomatic noun phrase
Policy critique
Patterns: avoid/apply a one-size-fits-all approach to education.
Definition: a single solution assumed to work for everyone.
Example: Schools should reject a one-size-fits-all approach to pathways. (Meaning: different students need options.)
Common synonym: uniform policy (pejorative).
Common mistakes: ❌ missing hyphens; ❌ plural verb with singular “approach”.
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bridge the gap between theory and practice / UK & US: /brɪdʒ ðə ɡæp bɪˈtwiːn ˈθɪəri ænd ˈpræktɪs/ — verb phrase
Linking idea
Patterns: bridge the gap between classroom learning and real workplaces.
Definition: connect abstract concepts with real-world application.
Example: Placements bridge the gap between theory and practice for healthcare students. (Meaning: apply knowledge.)
Common synonym: connect theory with practice.
Common mistakes: ❌ “bridge the gap of” → ✅ “bridge the gap between A and B”.
Vocabulary & Expressions Review
Two interactive exercises with instant explanations to consolidate your learning.
Q1
Choose the sentence that correctly addresses a “to what extent” prompt.
Target: stance precision
Prompt: To what extent do you agree or disagree that schools should prioritise vocational training over academic subjects?
Answer: B. The key to a “to what extent” question is stating degree, not just listing pros and cons or offering generic comments. Option B explicitly signals a partial stance (“partly agree”) and specifies the boundary: vocational expansion within an academic core. This directly matches the scale implied by the prompt. Option A is vague; it merely announces a discussion of pros/cons without declaring where on the spectrum the writer stands. Option C describes diversity in learning styles but never addresses extent, so it fails Task Response. Option D is a truism that could fit any education topic and therefore contributes nothing to stance clarity. A clear thesis must preview direction and scope, which B achieves compactly. Examiners value a decisive position early to guide coherence and paragraph planning. By declaring a calibrated stance, you commit to two distinct reasons that map cleanly to body paragraphs. This improves cohesion because every explanation can link back to the exact degree claimed. Finally, explicit calibration (“partly agree”) reduces the risk of drifting into a different question mid-essay.
Q2
Pick the sentence with the correct pattern for integrate.
Target: verb–preposition pattern
Which option uses integrate with the correct preposition for this topic?
Answer: C. With this meaning, the high-frequency pattern is “integrate A into B,” signalling that A becomes a functioning part of B. Option A (“to”) is a common learner slip; it implies direction but not assimilation. Option B (“with”) can be acceptable in some registers, yet it typically implies coexistence or pairing rather than full incorporation; IELTS arguments often need the stronger “into” to show curricular embedding. Option D (“by”) misrepresents agency rather than relationship. Precision matters because prepositions locate ideas within structures: “into” emphasises that placements are not add-ons but elements within the course design. Accurate patterns support Lexical Resource and Grammatical Range & Accuracy simultaneously. Examiners notice when prepositional choices align with typical academic collocations. Clear patterns also make topic sentences cleaner and link-backs less wordy. Using expected structures frees cognitive load for reasoning. In short, “integrate A into B” communicates curricular design choices transparently and efficiently.
Q3
Choose the sentence that correctly uses and punctuates over-specialisation.
Target: word form & hyphenation
Select the most accurate and formal option.
Answer: D. The hyphen signals a compound concept that functions as a single noun, and the UK spelling aligns with the register used elsewhere in the module. Option A lacks the hyphen and an article (“at a young age”); it is also vague (“limits” of what?). Option B treats the term as positive expertise, which clashes with its cautionary meaning in education policy contexts. Option C inserts an unnecessary definite article and an unjustified positive evaluation. In IELTS Writing, consistent hyphenation and regionally consistent spelling increase perceived control. The collocation “restrict future options” naturally partners with the concept, strengthening coherence. Accurate punctuation prevents misreading (e.g., “over” modifying a later word). Clear stance language helps develop concessions and rebuttals cleanly. Ultimately, D demonstrates both lexical precision and appropriate evaluative tone for argumentative tasks.
Q4
Which option best defines transferable skills for this topic?
Target: lexical definition
Pick the most accurate and useful definition for IELTS argumentation.
Answer: A. “Transferable skills” are portable competencies, not physical tools (B) nor fixed procedures (D). They include communication, problem-solving, numeracy and digital literacy—skills valued in multiple sectors—so they future-proof employability in changing markets. Definitions that highlight cross-context applicability help you argue for academic foundations in BP1. Option C is the opposite of the idea; “cannot be applied” contradicts “transferable.” In IELTS, precise definitions let you build cause-effect chains: transferable skills → adaptability → sustained employability. They also support examples that show how one competence (e.g., interpreting ratios) works in different settings (hospitality, engineering). Using the term accurately raises Lexical Resource while keeping clarity. Because examiners reward idea development over jargon, a concise, accurate definition like A is ideal. It also allows link-back sentences to your thesis without awkward rewording. Overall, A anchors robust, coherent argumentation.
Q5
Choose the sentence with the correct comparative pattern for prioritise.
Target: verb pattern
Pick the best academic phrasing.
Answer: C. The natural comparative pattern is “prioritise X over Y.” Option A incorrectly uses “than,” which is tied to comparatives like “more/less.” Option B repeats “more” redundantly and still mismanages the comparison. Option D scrambles word order and adds an infinitive that does not belong. IELTS examiners listen for target-like phraseology that reads as professional and economical; C accomplishes this with minimal words and maximum clarity. Accurate patterns keep topic sentences crisp, leaving room for mechanisms and examples. Because “prioritise” can sound prescriptive, using the soft modal “should” also moderates tone. This phrasing aligns well with the “extent” framing because it can be adapted (“partly,” “to some extent”) without breaking the pattern. Finally, idiomatic prepositions improve cohesion; readers won’t stumble over structure and can focus on your reasoning. That yields better Coherence & Cohesion scores overall.
Q6
Pick the most formal and thesis-ready stance sentence.
Target: thesis register
Choose the version you would place at the end of your introduction.
Answer: A. It declares stance clearly and previews the essay’s organising idea (integration within a rigorous core). Option B is informal and uses colloquial markers (“nah,” “stuff”). Option C hedges so much that the examiner cannot locate a position, undermining Task Response. Option D is formulaic and content-free; examiners prefer a thesis that says what you believe, not that you will “discuss.” Strong theses increase coherence by acting as a promise the body paragraphs fulfil. They also enable tighter topic sentences, because each paragraph can map back to one of the thesis points. A formal yet concise stance supports Lexical Resource without sounding memorised. It keeps register academic and avoids clichés. Furthermore, a decisive thesis helps you resist drifting into advantages/disadvantages essays. Overall, A is fit for purpose and signals a well-planned response.
Q7
Which link-back sentence most strongly reinforces the thesis?
Target: cohesion (link-back)
Assume your thesis favours a blended model rather than pure prioritisation.
Answer: D. A link-back must echo the thesis’ core language and logic, not just mark the end of a paragraph. D reprises “integrating … into a strong academic core” and ties the point to future-proof employability (“evolving labour markets”). A, B and C are vague and could end almost any paragraph; this weakens coherence because the examiner cannot see how the point advances your specific argument. Repeating a controlled set of key nouns/verbs builds cohesion without sounding repetitive if used strategically. It also prepares the reader for the next paragraph by reinforcing the organising idea. Examiners reward paragraphs that feel purposeful and internally complete. Link-backs serve as mini-conclusions that re-anchor stance. They also reduce the need for overused transitions like “moreover.” Finally, precise link-backs make conclusions easier to write because the thesis language has been maintained consistently throughout.
Q8
Choose the sentence that uses on balance correctly.
Target: discourse marker use
Pick the most natural academic use.
Answer: B. “On balance” signals a global judgement after weighing arguments; B provides that evaluation clearly. A misapplies it to a trivial past event, which breaks register. C treats it as a forward pointer to structure rather than judgement, making it redundant with signposting. D couples it with awkward prepositions and no real evaluation. In IELTS conclusions—or in link-backs that summarise a paragraph’s case—“On balance” helps frame a decisive viewpoint without sounding absolute. It should introduce a clause that states your comparative judgement explicitly. Appropriate use improves Coherence & Cohesion by marking the evaluation stage of your reasoning. Overuse within body paragraphs, however, can feel mechanical; reserve it for key summary moments. Pairing it with precise nouns (e.g., “a blended curriculum”) avoids vague endings. Used well, it strengthens the sense of argument closure.
Q9
Which statement about a placement is most accurate for this topic?
Target: definition in context
Select the best description.
Answer: A. In education English, “placement” typically denotes supervised, curriculum-linked work experience with defined outcomes and assessment. B describes casual employment, which may build soft skills but is not inherently a placement. C focuses on unpaid trials with no structured learning, which does not meet the pedagogic purpose described in the essay. D is observational and lacks competence-based objectives. Using the term precisely allows you to argue for alignment between academic content and industry practice. It also supports examples that demonstrate how theory transfers to real tasks. Precise terminology increases Lexical Resource while keeping ideas credible. Examiners prefer concrete, sector-neutral wording that can be understood without specialist knowledge. Finally, treating placements as assessed components helps justify their time cost within a constrained school timetable.
Q10
Choose the sentence with correct collocation for relevance.
Target: noun + preposition
Select the most idiomatic choice.
Answer: C. The collocation is “relevance to,” not “with/on.” Option D is ungrammatical because “is” cannot link a noun without support; the pattern would need “of” or restructuring (“is highly relevant to”). Prepositional precision elevates the naturalness of academic prose and prevents small errors accumulating into a lower score. Using “to” frames a clear relationship between the course and industry needs, which is central to this topic. Correct collocations also make paraphrasing easier; “relevant to industry needs,” “maintain workplace relevance,” and “align with employer expectations” can be varied smoothly. Examiners look for steady control rather than rare vocabulary. Getting small but frequent patterns right improves fluency and reader comfort. It also frees words for explanation rather than repair. Therefore, C is the idiomatic, concise choice for IELTS writing.
Q1
Choose the most idiomatic sentence using bridge the gap.
Target: collocation + preposition
Pick the sentence that best fits IELTS academic style.
Answer: B. The canonical collocation is “bridge the gap between A and B.” Option B uses the fixed pattern and a concise academic register. A replaces “between” with “of,” which is unidiomatic. C mismanages prepositions and leaves the relationship unclear. D adds a progressive form and a pluralised “gaps” that sound colloquial and imprecise. IELTS favours stable collocations because they reduce processing effort for the reader and free space for argument development. Using the fixed pattern also strengthens link-back sentences, since you can recycle the exact phrase strategically. Accurate collocation raises Lexical Resource without resorting to rare words. Finally, the verb “help” softens overclaiming, a good habit in formal writing.
Q2
Pick the most natural sentence using alignment.
Target: alignment with/between
Which option is the best academic phrasing?
Answer: C. The idiomatic patterns are “alignment with” and “alignment between A and B.” C uses “into alignment with,” a compact, widely used formulation in policy writing. A misselects the preposition (“to”). B is vague (“on”) and clumsy. D mixes “between” with “to,” creating a prepositional clash. Correct prepositions are a fast way to improve perceived control because they are frequent and highly salient to examiners. The phrase “employer expectations” is also precise and avoids empty nouns like “needs” when specifics are implied. This structure also supports passive paraphrases if variety is needed (“the curriculum should be brought into alignment with…”). Using this pattern keeps sentence rhythm tight and professional.
Q3
Select the best noun-phrase form for feasibility.
Target: “feasibility of doing”
Choose the most formal option.
Answer: A. The standard noun-phrase pattern is “the feasibility of doing X.” B is common in speech but less formal and less idiomatic in academic writing. C and D have clumsy clause structures and read as editing errors. In IELTS, using the nominal form helps compress ideas and maintain a formal tone. It also allows you to add modifiers cleanly (“financial and logistical feasibility of expanding…”). Choosing the expected pattern reduces the chance of preposition errors and improves cohesion across sentences. Examiners reward dense, accurate phrasing that remains clear. This construction is easy to recycle in conclusions when recommending policies.
Q4
Which sentence uses evidence suggests that most appropriately?
Target: reporting phrase usage
Pick the option that fits academic tone and logic.
Answer: D. The phrase should introduce generalisable, externally grounded claims, not personal anecdotes (A) or subjective preferences (B). C is too vague to be useful. D pairs the reporting frame with a specific, measurable outcome, which aligns with IELTS expectations for argumentative support. Using this structure allows you to follow with a mechanism (“because applied learning increases motivation”) or a concession (“although the effect varies by sector”). It also sounds balanced and avoids overclaiming, which examiners appreciate. Reserve this phrase for claims that plausibly have data behind them; otherwise, it reads as empty rhetoric. In conclusions, you can restate the finding as “studies consistently indicate…,” maintaining variety while preserving register.
Q5
Pick the correct usage of hands-on experience.
Target: meaning & part of speech
Choose the option that is accurate and academic.
Answer: C. “Hands-on experience” is a fixed noun phrase meaning practical exposure under real conditions. A tries to use “hands-on” as a verb, which is ungrammatical. B mis-spells and mis-forms the phrase. D again mislabels the part of speech. In IELTS, using the correct noun phrase lets you formulate precise claims (“hands-on experience improves competence”) followed by mechanisms and examples. It also contrasts naturally with “purely theoretical instruction,” facilitating balanced paragraphs. Because the phrase is widely understood, it adds clarity without risking misinterpretation. Keep the hyphen when using it attributively (“hands-on experience,” “hands-on training”).
Q6
Choose the sentence that uses stakeholder correctly.
Target: meaning & countability
Pick the most accurate and formal option.
Answer: B. “Stakeholder” is a countable noun meaning any party with an interest in or influence over a decision. A contains a spelling error and a plural–verb disagreement. C narrows the meaning incorrectly to investors only. D misstates countability. Using the term correctly helps you propose realistic policies, because consulting stakeholders is a common implementation step. It also enables concessive moves (“while some stakeholders favour…”) that sound balanced and analytical. Proper punctuation—such as em dashes for apposition—improves readability in complex lists. This vocabulary fits IELTS topics on education, transport, health, and environment, so mastering it pays off across prompts.
Q7
Pick the best conclusion opener using on balance.
Target: discourse marker in conclusion
Which sentence is most suitable for the first line of a conclusion?
Answer: D. “On balance” should signal a final judgement after weighing arguments. D summarises the stance and mirrors thesis language, creating strong cohesion. A misuses the marker to preview structure rather than deliver an evaluation. B is ungrammatical and semantically unclear. C announces an intention rather than giving a judgement, which weakens conclusions. In IELTS, conclusions should be short, decisive, and free of new ideas. Re-using controlled wording from your thesis and link-backs reassures the examiner that your essay was planned and coherent. This technique also prevents last-minute topic drift.
Q8
Choose the best sentence using transferable skills.
Target: meaning + example logic
Pick the option that supports an IELTS argument.
Answer: A. “Transferable skills” are cross-context competencies, not tools (B), rules (C), or double majors (D). A links the skills to a macro outcome—sustained employability—which is exactly the kind of causal chain IELTS rewards. This sentence lets you develop BP1 with mechanisms (how numeracy supports safety, scheduling, and budgeting) and examples in multiple sectors. Clear terminology reduces the need for repeated definitions and allows smoother paraphrase. Precision here also prevents accidental over-specialisation claims later in the essay.
Q9
Choose the correct passive form with integrate into.
Target: verb + preposition + passive
Which sentence is the most natural academic phrasing?
Answer: C. With this meaning, the target-like pattern is “integrated into.” A uses “to,” which is non-idiomatic here. B uses an active structure with “with,” which can imply loose combination rather than full embedding. D confuses agency. The passive is common in academic registers because it foregrounds the curricular design rather than the actor. Using the expected preposition keeps sentences compact and prevents readers from stumbling over structure. This pattern also supports parallelism across paragraphs, aiding cohesion.
Q10
Pick the sentence that correctly uses incentive patterns.
Target: noun + infinitive/for -ing
Choose the best option for IELTS style and accuracy.
Answer: B. The common, natural patterns are “incentive to do X” and “an incentive for doing X.” B uses the first pattern with a clear actor and outcome. A omits “to” and uses a bare infinitive, creating an error. C mixes prepositions and reads as unedited. D misstates countability and gives a weak definition. In IELTS, precise patterns are crucial because they recur in recommendations (“governments should provide incentives to hire apprentices”). Clean patterning supports concision and avoids awkward repairs mid-sentence. This also improves rhythm, which examiners note under Coherence & Cohesion.