Best coaching classes for IELTS in Noida
IELTS is recognized by universities and employers in many countries, like Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the UK, and the USA. It is also recognized by professional bodies, immigration authorities and other government agencies. . IELTS is required for entry to all most all English speaking countries.
We, GSA Academy at Noida and Greater Noida are proving Best coaching classes for IELTS in Noida (the International English Language Testing System) is designed to assess the language ability of candidates who need to study or work where English is used as the language of communication.
We can choose between the Academic or General Training versions of the test. Academic is for students and working candidates. And General Training is basically for immigration candidates. All academic and general candidates do the same Listening and Speaking sections.
The test has four sections:
Listening - 4 sections, 40 questions, 30 minutes
Speaking - interview, 15 minutes
Reading - different for Academic or General Training - 3 sections, 40 questions, 60 minutes
Writing - different for Academic or General Training - 2 writing tasks, 40 and 20 minutes each
The score of IELTS test is between 1 and 9. Half scores such as 6.5 are possible. Universities often demand an IELTS score of 6 or 7. They may also demand a minimum score in each of the 4 sections. For immigration the desired score is 8 triple 7, 8 in listening and 7,7,7 in other sections.
Arrange with your closest test centre- there are currently more than 500 Centres, in over 120 countries. There are frequent dates, usually on Thursdays or Saturdays.
Fees are set by test centres and vary from country to country. Expect to pay around £160 GBP, €210 Euros or $230 USD AND INR 12650.
1. Practising builds up confidence and teaches you how to recover even if you’ve missed a question or two; how to move on and get all the rest done. Practice reveals what your weaknesses are, which tasks are the most difficult for you, and where the points are usually lost. Paying extra attention to those tasks will save precious points and improve the overall band score.
2. In the Reading and Writing sections the most common fear is to not finish on time. The best way to deal with this fear is to take control of the time and manage it carefully. The students are given 3 passages and under no circumstances should you let one passage eat up all the time. Divide the time in the very beginning of the test and write down when you will start working on each passage.
3. The fear of writing to many students are afraid of getting a topic for the essay and having nothing to say about it. The easiest way to get over it is to read a lot of essays on different topics and to absorb other people’s ideas. The truth is that IELTS examiners don’t care about the source of the information; it is the way an essay is written that matters.
4. This is a fear of interaction with the examiner. In general, the Speaking module often makes people feel uncomfortable because there is little or no time to think. If they ask you a question and you have no idea what to say? To make this fear go away people need to build up confidence. Practising speaking for a couple of weeks with a list of topics can do wonders; after you’ve proven the ability to speak to yourself, it becomes much easier to demonstrate it to the examiner.
More than 2 million people a year take the test.