Which test is more ideal? TOEFL or IELTS
TOEFL
vs IELTS ? This is the last and biggest conundrum for students looking to
study abroad. Find out the strengths of each one and decide which one suit you
best. If you are applying to university or college in an English-speaking
country and English is not your first language, your institution may require
you to take a standardised test to prove your English language proficiency.
If
you aren’t an English native speaker, you’ll almost always be required to sit
an English language proficiency test as part of your application to study
abroad at an English-speaking university. The two most accepted English
language tests worldwide are the International English Language Test System (IELTS) and
Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL)
tests.
Whilst
both accurately test your level of English and are widely accepted across over
thousands of institutions worldwide, the two tests are different in their
approach, structure and teaching criteria, so you should think carefully about
which one you’ll choose to sit.
Read
our guide to the differences between IELTS and TOEFL to help you decide which
is best for you.
What is IELTS?
The
IELTS is an English language test that is used for educational, immigration and
occupational purposes, and is accepted by over 9,000 institutions across 130
countries worldwide. Jointly administered by the British Council, University of
Cambridge ESOL Examinations and IDP Education Australia, IELTS uses British
English, and is more likely to be favoured by UK and
institutions such as USA and Australia. Depending
on the entry requirements of your study programme, you might need to take
either the Academic or General Training IELTS exam.
What is TOEFL?
The
TOEFL test seeks to test your ability to communicate in English in specifically
academic, university and classroom-based settings. It is accepted by over 8,500
institutions across 130 countries, including the UK, USA and Australia, as well
as all of the world’s top 100 universities. TOEFL is administered by US-based
organisation the Education Testing Service, and so is conducted in American
English. This test is more likely to be favoured by American institutions.
Exam Structures
Speaking
Whilst
both exams have a speaking component, the IELTS
speaking test is taken face-to-face with an examiner. In the
TOEFL exam, you’ll answer six questions into a microphone which are recorded
and later sent to a group of six reviewers. Your IELTS speaking score will only
be determined by a single examiner. The IELTS test will take between 11-14
minutes and may not necessarily be on the same day as the other exam
components, whilst the TOEFL will take about 20 minutes and is always on the
same day as the rest of the exam.
Where
the IELTS exam features a range of different accents speaking in English, TOEFL
only features American speakers.
Writing
The
written component of the TOEFL exam is typed as opposed to the paper-based
IELTS exam. TOEFL requires you to complete two tasks, the first of which will
be a five-paragraph essay between 300-350 words. For the second task, you will
need to take notes from a section of text and lecture excerpt on the same
topic, and use them to construct a 150-225 word response. The IELTS
writing test also has two sections, the first of which however
requires you to summarise or explain information presented in a graph, chart,
table or diagram. In the second, you’ll need to write a 200-250 word response
to a prompt that offers a point of view, argument or asks you to write in a
particular language style.
Reading
The
reading tests for both exams are quite similar: the TOEFL reading test is made
up of three-five reading sections you will have 20 minutes to complete, each
drawn from academic content you’d be likely to encounter in a classroom. You
will have to answer a series of multiple choice questions testing how well you’ve
understood the texts.
The IELTS
reading test has three sections also each 20 minutes long and with
texts academic in nature, but with a wider range of question types that could
be anything from ‘fill in the gaps’ to short answer. Questions are also
designed to test how well you’ve understood the text in its particular use of
language, ideas and style.
Listening
Tests
vary quite significantly in their listening components. The TOEFL listening
test is between 40-60 minutes long, and involves you listening to excerpts from
university lectures or conversations on a university campus. You will be
required to take notes whilst listening and answer a series of multiple choice
questions afterwards. In the IELTS
listening test, students can answer questions whilst they are
listening to the recordings, and will need to respond to a number of different
question types and exercises of different lengths.
Scoring
The
speaking and writing sections of the TOEFL are graded based on how they appear
as a whole, including your range of vocabulary, writing style and grammar.
Those of the IELTS are considered based on separate grades of individual
criteria such as your use of logic, cohesion, grammar and fluency. For example,
an essay with a logical progression of ideas but poor grammar will score higher
in a TOEFL exam, whereas an essay with strong grammar and vocabulary that is
weaker in expressing an idea will do better by the IELTS criteria.
The
IELTS is graded on a band system from 1-9, with your overall score being an
average of your separate scores in all four tests. Your overall score will be
rounded to the nearest half-band, i.e. if your overall average is 6.25, it will
be rounded up to a final score of 6.5. TOEFL is a single test that is graded
out of 120 points.
So
now the decision falls to you – which will you take: IELTS or
TOEFL ?

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