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Your score can improve by —BAND if you fix these mistakes.
Submitted Essay
Analysis Panel
Beyond Words: The Blueprint of a Great Essay
A high-scoring essay is like a well-built house. It’s not just about using fancy bricks (vocabulary); it’s about having a solid plan. Before you even write a single word, think about your structure. Here’s a simple way to visualize it.
The Foundation: Your Introduction
This is where you welcome the examiner. Introduce the topic in your own words and clearly state your position or what you will discuss. It sets the stage for everything that follows.
The Walls: Your Body Paragraphs
Each paragraph should be a strong room with one main idea. Introduce the idea, explain it, and give a specific example. This is where you build your argument, brick by brick.
The Roof: Your Conclusion
A great conclusion provides protection and closure. It briefly summarizes your main points and restates your position. No new ideas here! Just a confident summary of the beautiful house you’ve just built.
What’s Your Stance? The Heart of Your Argument
Your “stance” is simply your clear opinion or position on the topic. It’s the most important part of your Task Response score. An examiner needs to know exactly where you stand. Our “Argument Breakdown” feature is designed to check this for you.
A Weak Stance
“Some people agree with this, and others disagree. Both sides have valid points.”
This is vague. The examiner is left wondering, “But what do YOU think?”A Strong Stance
“While there are some benefits to this approach, I firmly believe that the disadvantages are far more significant.”
This is clear and confident. It tells the examiner exactly what the essay will argue.Unlocking Your Potential: Your Questions Answered
Yes, our IELTS Task 2 essay checker is 100% free to use. It provides a complete analysis, including an overall band score and detailed feedback on all four marking criteria, without any cost.
It usually means one of two things: either your main position isn’t clear enough, or your supporting ideas aren’t directly related to your position. A strong argument needs both a clear point and relevant evidence. Look at the “Supporting Facts” score in the breakdown. If it’s low, focus on adding more specific examples to your paragraphs.
Yes, but “complex” doesn’t mean “complicated”! A complex sentence is simply one that combines a main idea with a related, dependent idea (e.g., using words like ‘although’, ‘while’, ‘because’, ‘which’). Using a mix of simple and complex sentences shows the examiner your grammatical flexibility, which is key for a Band 7+ in Grammatical Range and Accuracy.
Yes. The tool is specifically designed to handle both IELTS Academic and General Training Task 2 questions. You can select the appropriate module before you begin writing to ensure the AI provides the most relevant and accurate feedback for your test type.
This is a very common situation! IELTS is a test of communication, not just a vocabulary quiz. You can use amazing words, but if your essay is poorly organized, doesn’t answer the question directly, or lacks a clear position, your score will be limited. This tool helps you see the whole picture. Use the high vocabulary score as a foundation and focus on improving the areas with lower scores, like Task Response or Coherence.