Band 6, 7, and 8 Examiner Comments | Learn the Exact Differences
Writing Task 1 is your first impression. Examiners assess 4 criteria: Task Achievement (TA), Coherence & Cohesion (CC), Lexical Resource (LR), and Grammatical Range & Accuracy (GRA). Each criterion is weighted equally — one weakness tanks your band. Below are 3 authentic model answers at different bands, with examiner commentary showing EXACTLY what changed between Band 6 and Band 7, and Band 7 and Band 8.
Task Achievement: All key features are covered with precise detail. The writer specifies exact figures ("9% in 1990 to roughly 6% in 2010") and interprets significance ("represents a reduction of 3 percentage points"). Synthesis of both countries is present.
Coherence & Cohesion: Transitions are sophisticated: "conversely," "consequently," "in summary." Pronouns are clear ("This downward trend suggests..."). Paragraph structure is logical: overview → Canada detail → India detail → synthesis. Cohesion is tight and professional.
Lexical Resource: Advanced vocabulary: "allocated," "witnessed," "modest decrease," "disposable income," "trajectories," "disparity." Academic register is maintained. Synonyms replace repetition: "decline," "fall," "decrease." Word choice is precise and varied.
Grammatical Range & Accuracy: Subordinate clauses present: "Although the percentage declined... the 10-percentage-point fall... represents only a 22% relative decrease." Passive voice used effectively: "was allocated." Complex noun phrases: "the proportion of household income allocated to food." Grammar is accurate and sophisticated.
Task Achievement: Every aspect is addressed with sophisticated interpretation. Exact figures are provided, AND relative percentages are calculated ("33% relative decrease," "22% relative decrease"). Deeper analysis connects patterns to broader economic concepts (liberalisation, poverty, structural constraints). Synthesis goes beyond mere comparison to economic interpretation.
Coherence & Cohesion: Sophisticated signposting: "by contrast," "whilst," "in synthesis," "furthermore." Paragraph unity is thematic (Canada's profile → India's profile → synthesis). Within paragraphs, ideas link seamlessly. The final sentence summarizes the deeper meaning, not just the numbers.
Lexical Resource: Sophisticated academic vocabulary: "delineate," "trajectory," "divergence," "prosperity," "contraction," "concomitant," "attenuation," "endemic," "amounting," "corroborates." Register is consistently formal-academic. Lexical precision is at PhD level.
Grammatical Range & Accuracy: Complex multi-clause sentences: "Declining from 9% in 1990 to 6% in 2010, the 33% relative decrease exemplifies the progressive liberalisation of household budgets concomitant with economic advancement." Passive voice integrated naturally. Nominalisations used effectively ("liberalisation," "advancement," "transformation"). No grammatical errors. Sentence variety is exceptional.
These model answers show the exact patterns that examiners look for. Get personal feedback on YOUR writing from an ex-IELTS examiner.
Message on WhatsApp
Task Achievement: Answer covers all main features but uses repetitive descriptions. "The percentage went down" appears 3 times. The conclusion restates obvious facts instead of offering insight.
Coherence & Cohesion: Paragraphs follow a logical order (intro → Canada → India → conclusion), but transitions are weak. "The situation is different" and "Although the percentage went down" are basic connectors. Pronouns lack precision.
Lexical Resource: Vocabulary is simple and repetitive: "spent money," "percentage," "showed." Academic synonyms are absent (e.g., "allocated," "fluctuated," "allocation").
Grammatical Range & Accuracy: Sentences are short and simple (SVO). Errors: "The line goes down steadily" (unclear subject). Present tense misused. Grammar is accurate but lacks complexity — no subordination, no passive voice.