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Showing posts from April, 2026

PTE Reading Tips: How to Score 79+ in PTE Academic Reading Section

  PTE Reading is the section where most candidates lose marks they should not be losing. The passages are not always difficult. The tasks are not always tricky. But without the right strategy for each task type, you will run out of time, second-guess your answers, and score below your actual ability. This guide gives you clear, task-by-task strategies to score 79+ in PTE Academic Reading — whether you are a beginner, switching from IELTS , or targeting a PR or study visa score. How PTE Reading Works PTE Reading has five task types. Each one tests a different reading skill: Reading and Writing: Fill in the Blanks (R&W FIB) — Choose the correct word from a dropdown to complete a passage. High scoring weight. Multiple Choice, Multiple Answer (MCMA) — Read a passage and select more than one correct answer. Wrong answers cost marks. Re-order Paragraphs — Arrange jumbled sentences into a logical paragraph. Reading: Fill in the Blanks (R FIB) — Drag and drop words into...

PTE Writing Tips: How to Score 79+ in Essay & Summarize Written Text

  PTE Writing Tips | Essay & Summarize Guide | Score 79+ Most PTE candidates underestimate the Writing section. They assume good English is enough. It is not. PTE Writing is scored by an AI that looks for very specific things — structure, word count, grammar, vocabulary, and content accuracy. If you do not know what the AI is looking for, you will keep losing marks even if your English is strong. This guide covers everything you need to score 79+ in PTE Writing — whether you are a beginner, switching from IELTS, or targeting PR or a study visa. PTE Writing: Two Tasks You Must Master PTE Writing has two tasks: Summarize Written Text (SWT) — Read a passage and summarize it in one sentence (5 to 75 words). Time: 10 minutes per task. Write Essay (WE) — Write an essay on a given topic (200 to 300 words). Time: 20 minutes. Both tasks are scored by AI on content, form, grammar, vocabulary, and spelling. Each area matters. Ignore one and your score drops. Summarize Writt...

PTE Speaking Tips: How to Improve Fluency & Pronunciation (Score 79+ Guide)

  PTE Speaking is one of the most misunderstood sections of the PTE Academic exam. Most test-takers focus only on vocabulary and grammar — and completely ignore the two things that decide their Speaking score the most: fluency and pronunciation. This guide gives you clear, practical tips to improve both — whether you are a beginner just starting PTE prep, someone switching from IELTS , or a candidate targeting 79+ for a study visa or PR application.   What Does PTE Actually Test in Speaking? PTE Speaking is scored by an AI — not a human examiner. This changes everything. The AI scores you on three things: Content — Did you cover the right points? Fluency — Did you speak smoothly without long pauses? Pronunciation — Did you produce sounds that are clear and natural? The most important thing to understand: the PTE AI does not care about your accent . Indian, Filipino, Chinese — any accent is fine. What it cannot handle is unclear sounds, unnatural stress, and b...

Top Grammar Rules for IELTS Writing & Speaking (Complete Guide to Band 7+)

Grammar is not just a rule book. In IELTS , grammar is 25% of your total score in both Writing and Speaking. Miss it, and you lose marks. Master it, and you move from Band 6 to Band 7 or higher. This guide covers the top grammar rules every IELTS test-taker must know — whether you are a beginner, an intermediate learner, or someone who just wants to improve their English.   Why Grammar Matters in IELTS In IELTS Writing and Speaking, examiners use a specific criterion called Grammatical Range and Accuracy (GRA) . It accounts for 25% of your band score in both modules. Examiners check two things: Range — Do you use a variety of sentence structures? Accuracy — Are your sentences free from errors? You don't need to know every grammar rule. You need to use the right ones — correctly and confidently. Rule 1: Use the Right Tense Tense errors are the most common reason students lose GRA marks. Mixing up tenses makes your writing confusing and your speaking sound unnatura...