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Task Achievement
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Your score can improve by — BAND if you fix these mistakes.
Submitted Report
Analysis Panel
From Data Detective to Storyteller
Writing a Task 1 report is like being a detective. The chart is your scene, filled with clues. Your mission isn’t to list every single piece of evidence, but to find the most important clues and tell the main story. Here’s how you can approach it.
Find the Main Clues
Before you write, spend a minute just looking. What’s the biggest number? The smallest? What is the most dramatic change? Are there any obvious similarities or differences? These are your “key features”—the most important parts of the story.
Tell the Story Clearly
Once you have your key features, your job is to report them. Group similar ideas together in paragraphs. For example, describe all the increases in one paragraph and the decreases in another. Use data from the chart to support everything you say, like a detective presenting evidence.
The All-Important Overview: Your Golden Paragraph
If you remember only one thing, let it be this: **every Task 1 report needs an overview.** This is a short paragraph (usually right after the introduction) that summarizes the 2-3 most important things you noticed. It’s the first thing an examiner looks for, and having a clear one can significantly boost your score.
Example Overview (for a line graph showing car sales):
“Overall, what stands out from the graph is that the sales of both Ford and Audi saw a significant upward trend over the period, while the figures for BMW remained relatively stable.”
Decoding the Data: Your Questions Answered
No, you do not! This is a very important difference from Task 2. In an academic report, your “Overview” paragraph acts as the summary. Adding a separate “Conclusion” paragraph at the end is unnecessary and wastes valuable time. Just focus on your Introduction, Overview, and 2-3 detailed Body Paragraphs.
Absolutely not. Your job is only to report what you see in the data. You should never try to guess the reasons for a trend or give your personal opinion (e.g., “I think sales went up because…”). Sticking only to the information provided is critical for a good Task Achievement score.
There’s no magic number, but the key is to use data to *support* your descriptions. Don’t just list every number. Make a statement first, then provide the data as evidence. For example, instead of saying “In 2010 it was 20%, in 2015 it was 40%…”, say “The percentage of X doubled over the five-year period, rising from 20% in 2010 to 40% in 2015.”
The principle is the same: find the key features! For a process, the key features are the number of stages, and the start and end points. For a map, the key features are the major changes that happened between the two years (e.g., new buildings, roads removed, forests cleared). Your overview should still summarize these main changes before you describe them in detail.