Skip to main content

Tips For Successfully Passing Your B2 to C2 English Exams. (Cambridge, Michigan, PTE, IELTS, TOEFL ect)

There are three stages to learning a new skill, such as studying for an international English exam to improve your English for school, university, or the workplace. At each stage, study tips can make your work easier and more successful. Firstly, you need to acquire the words, grammar, and structures of the language. As you go along, you need to use the language (which is one of the best ways of learning it as well). Finally, as with many things we study, there is likely to be some form of examination to pass. That is what is used to confirm our level of competence with our new language. Often, this is where practice exams become your assessment process.

Passing an exam can be very different from speaking a language. While learning to pass a test is not as important as possessing the knowledge and skills that are being tested, nevertheless it is an important step on your road to success. Using the study tips listed below will help your acquisition of English.

1. Establish a Timetable

A timetable is a really useful tool to help you to pass your exam. It provides a framework for the revision you need to do; it helps you to plan your time carefully; it is of great use in making you identify those areas on which you need to work.

The best way to prepare a timetable is to take a diary, an excel worksheet, or even a hand-drawn grid. Start from the day of your exam and list the days backward from there. Next, on a separate sheet make a list of everything on which you might be tested. For those areas in which you are really confident, you need to do nothing as you can pass these areas already; everything else should be divided up between the time you have. Try to work for two to three short (say 30 to 40 minutes) sessions per day. But remember to build in times for breaks. As you tick off the days on your timetable, a sense of achievement comes about which really helps your confidence.

Of course, while a timetable is an excellent tool to use for the preparation of exams, it is also a good way to organize your everyday study, to help you spread your workload.

2. Homework

Of course, everything you do in preparation for your exams is homework, but certain types of questions and tasks come up more often than others.  Your teachers will often give you a collection of questions from past tests, or you can find them online. It is a great study tip to practice getting perfect answers to these questions. You can even learn them off by heart. Just remember to adapt your answers to the question that is actually set in the real exam.

3. Learn How to Pronounce Words

The oral part of any English study is very important. English is a language with many odd pronunciations and the more of these you can learn, the better. For example, ‘Towcester’ is a small town in Northamptonshire. A ‘toaster’ is a cooking implement for toasting bread. The two words are written very differently, but pronounced the same. While you cannot learn every odd pronunciation, you can learn the most common ways to say sounds. Collections such as ‘cious’ and ‘sious’ words (pronounced ‘shus’ as in ‘conscious’) can easily be learned and will help your performance in the exams.

4. Learn Spelling Patterns

A good speller is often a good English speaker. Spelling patterns in English can be obscure (see ‘Towcester’ and ‘Toaster’ above) but there are some rules that can be learned. These include such things as a short vowel is followed by a double consonant and the ‘I before e except after c’ guide that applies to many words.


5. Learn the Meaning of Questions

It doesn’t matter how good your answer is if you misunderstood the question. Verbal examiners often love to ask similar types of questions as it is a way that they can maintain consistent standards. Learn the questions and learn the answers together, and ask your teachers if there is something that you do not understand.

6. Learn your Stock Phrases

Exams are about impressing the people who grade the exams. Study is about becoming as competent as you can be. Little impresses more than the accurate use of a good phrase. There are certain phrases that you may need to ask in an exam, so learn them to enable you to use them easily without causing any stress. Phrases such as ‘Can you repeat that, please?’ and ‘Could you give me a moment to think?’ are good for oral tests, while linking phrases such as ‘On the other hand’ and ‘Under certain circumstances’ are the kind of phrases that might come up in your written tests.

7. Make a List of Vocabulary

And learn it. A wide vocabulary is one of the most important aspects to acquiring your language. Not only does it help you to understand the questions you are asked, but it also makes for impressive answers. Once again, by looking through preparation books, old work exercises, exams and websites you can get to know the types of vocabulary examiners choose to use, and the words that look impressive in your answers.  It is a strong study tip to find out the sort of vocabulary that the different English assessment systems use, and then make sure that you are familiar with them.


8. Immerse Yourself in the Language

The second best way to improve your English is to immerse yourself in the language. By that, we mean read widely – newspapers, online articles, books and magazines. It also means doing things like watching TV, listening to English language music and so on. These are fun and easy ways to prepare for your study program as they are enjoyable to do.

9. Talk

If immersing yourself in the language is the second-best way to study English, then speaking it with friends and family is the best way. That is because this is an active process. Your brain is constantly thinking, actively choosing the best words and phrases. Words become firmly placed in your head… And talking is an easy thing to do.



10. It Is Not Just About English

As I explained at the beginning, passing an English test is not just about being strong in the language. It is about being able to do well under the pressure of an exam. There are some tips that can help.  A brief read-through of your notes on the morning of the exam can help you to feel good about yourself. Some breakfast or lunch gives you energy. Discussing your answers after the exam is not a good idea. Although we all know there are many ways to be right, it is human nature to worry if our answers are different to other people’s responses. Arriving in plenty of time with plenty of equipment can reduce anxiety.

Everybody prepares for their English exam in a different way, but by following the ten study tips listed above, students can feel more confident about their upcoming tests.

Good luck and good studying.











Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The 50 Most Important Idioms for Achieving a B2 to C2 Level of English.

  Due to the complexities of English, nobody, native or second language learner can honestly brag about having a proficient level of the language without a solid knowledge of Idioms.  Every day, in almost every conversation, native speakers will use idioms more than someone who is new to the language, simply because they are more familiar with them and know the context in which they should be used. Therefore, this means that when you, the second language learner uses an idiom in the correct context, that you have a more proficient level of English and therefore you sound more like a native speaker. Below is a list of 50 of the most important general idioms necessary for traveling the B2 to C2 language learning journey. With these idioms, you will be able to listen and speak more like a native speaker, therefore, enhancing your ability to communicate effectively. Study tips for how to learn idioms. The 60 most important phrasal verbs for achieving a B2 to C2 level of English. I...

The 60 Most Important Phrasal Verbs for Achieving a B2 to C2 Level of English.

  Due to the complexities of English, nobody can honestly brag about having a proficient level of the language without a solid knowledge of phrasal verbs and Idioms.  Every day, in almost every conversation, native speakers will use phrasal verbs idioms more than someone who is new to the language, simply because they are more familiar with them and know the context in which they should be used. Therefore, this means that when you, the second language learner uses a phrasal verb or idiom in the correct context, that you have a more proficient level of English and therefore you sound more like a native speaker. Below is a list of 60 of the most important general phrasal verbs necessary for traveling the B2 to C2 language learning journey. With these phrasal verbs, you will be able to listen and speak more like a native speaker, therefore, enhancing your ability to communicate effectively. The 50 Most Important Idioms for Achieving a B2 to C2 Level of English. Study tips for how...

40 of the Most Important Expressions for Achieving an Advanced level of English

  English is full of various forms of common expressions, be it idioms, phrasal verbs, metaphors, similes, slang etc and is basically a phrase or saying that is commonly used in everyday English to express certain ideas or opinions. Understanding English expressions is important for two reasons, firstly because they require a deeper familiarity of the English language to comprehend what someone means when they use them in conversation, and secondly, for those who live, work or study in an English speaking society, they reinforce your ability to understand the world in which you are living. Expressions may seem complicated at first, but they can actually be a lot of fun to learn.  Common Expressions: A New Way to Express Yourself in the English Language The meaning of an expression generally depends on the specific context in which it is used. When someone tells you to ‘break a leg’, for example, they aren’t saying that in a literal sense, but instead are wishing you...