Hello there, IELTS students.
In this tutorial, we're going to look at how
to describe a pie chart for IELTS Academic
Task 1.
My name is Ben.
You know me from IELTS Podcast.
This tutorial is divided up in 3 parts.
First, we're going to look at the language.
Then I want to give you some tips.
And then we're going to look at an easy essay
template.
Four paragraphs, really simple, and it's a
good way to prepare for the IELTS.
So grab a pen and paper (you're going to need
it) because I'm going to give you lots of
terms,
lots of tips,
and I think it would be really beneficial
for you if you did actually write these down
as you hear them.
Because it'll help you to remember them.
You'll have them down there on paper as an
easy reference.
It will improve your listening skills (and
of course it will improve your speaking skills
because as you write them down, you'll be
hearing the perfect pronunciation...
Well, native English pronunciation...
Even if I do have a little bit of an accent
from the North but it doesn't really matter.
It's not going to destroy your IELTS speaking
exam).
Alright, let's get going.
So the language for portions.
I'm going to give you a variety because you
cannot always use the numbers.
Because it gets boring and you've got to show
a range of vocabulary to pick up points for
lexical resource.
So if it's "60%" you can say "nearly a third."
"nearly a third"
If it's "52%" you can say "over a half."
"Over a half of all respondents..." or
"Over half of all respondents replied 'yes.'"
or
"Over half of all the respondents were from
Scotland."
If it's a small percentage (2%, 3%, 1%) you
can say "a small fraction."
"A small fraction of sales originated in Vietnam."
for example.
We can also say, "Exactly 30% or students
studied economics."
for example.
If it's around a quarter (24% for example,
26%,) you can say "roughly a quarter of respondents."
And if it's around three quarters (75%, 74%,
76%... whatever) you can say "Around three
quarters of sales were from Nigeria."
(or whatever)
Now then.
Hopefully you've still got your pen in your
hand.
I'm going to give you a very useful sentence
that you can definitely use when you're describing
a pie chart.
All you have to do is identify the largest
section and the smallest section.
And then basically memorize this sentence:
"It is clear that x represents the largest
portion, whereas y is undoubtedly the smallest."
Let me put it in context.
"It is clear that education represents the
largest portion whereas the environment is
undoubtedly the smallest."
One very easy sentence and you can use it
in every single pie chart essay.
... Well, not "every single."
There may be some cases where you cannot use
it but it's just a general rule.
It's good to have a sentence like that.
Now, some more language.
We can say "About half the amount of televisions
were from Iraq (or wherever)."
"Precisely a third of the televisions were
sold in Glasgow (wherever)."
"Almost a quarter..."
"A small fraction..."
"A large sector..."
Copy all of those down.
Use them.
Show the examiner that you have a variety
of language.
You've got a large lexical resource.
Now, we're also going to need the language
for comparisons.
So if we're making comparisons, here are some
set phrases.
We can say:
"Twice as many people prefer Kellogg�s over
(I don�t' know) supermarket y own brand
(or whatever)."
"Nearly four times as many people listen to
IELTS Podcast than (what the hell's whatever)..."
"Whereas sales for x were just 10%."
So I'll just link those together.
What we could say is:
"In 1955 approximately three quarters were
male whereas in 1960 this had fallen to just
under a fifth."
That's a useful little phrase there, "whereas,"
especially when we're making the comparisons.
Now, if we're following the four-paragraph
model, we're going to finish with a summary.
Just outlining the overall characteristics
of the graph/of the pie chart.
Here are some perfect sentences you can use
in this final paragraph.
We can say:
"In all countries observed, the largest amount
of sales were seen in Wales."
We can say:
"Overall the majority of the countries experienced
x, y, zed." or
"Overall the majority of people interviewed
said they preferred beef (or whatever)."
Another sentence:
"Overall it is clear the amount of sales...
Blah, blah, blah."
Next one:
"To summarize the most marked change is the
jump from vegetarianism to veganism (or whatever)."
And the final sentence you can use is:
"Overall amongst the six regions, five make
up the largest expenses followed by 
three representing the lowest."
Or to be a little bit more specific:
"Overall amongst the six regions, England
and Wales make up the largest expenses followed
by Scotland representing the lowest."
So another sentence there that you can basically
copy and paste and drop into the essay, assuming
it is in context.
So be careful there; it has to be relevant.
You can't just copy-paste it and just dump
it in the essay.
So make sure it's relevant.
Now, we're going to look at some tips.
Sometimes, with IELTS Academic Task 1, it's
impossible to compare the information.
Maybe you've got a table followed by a pie
chart, and they just don't correspond.
So in this case, what you do is just write
a paragraph about the pie chart, and a paragraph
about the table.
That's it.
Next one.
Next tip.
Avoid stating opinions.
Now, imagine we've got a pie chart showing
holiday visits to Germany in 1980, and holiday
visits to Germany in 2010.
And there's been a change; there are more
visits nowadays.
And maybe we want to say it's because of the
popularity of Berlin.
Maybe we know because we have a friend in
Germany that the change is because Berlin
has become very trendy.
We do not mention it.
We never put our opinion in there.
All we have to do is summarize the data.
We don't have to put anything of the reason
why, unless it's actually in the data.
But if it's your opinion and you know why
sales have increased, like the prices of oil
has increased, or whatever, it doesn't matter.
Don't put it in there.
Just stick to what's on the paper.
Next tip.
Check the time frame on the pie chart.
Does the pie chart show you information from
1960?
In which case, you're going to use the past
tense.
Does it show you information from the current
year?
Which you'd use the present.
Or is it a forecast?
In which case of course, you'll use the future
tense.
So check the time frame, use the appropriate
tense.
If you want to pick up more points, extra
points, use a passive construction.
Grammatical range and accuracy.
Show a range of the grammar structures you
know.
So use a passive construction that's with
the verb "to be."
The next one, which is very important.
Focus on getting the appropriate data from
the graph into your writing.
I want to go into more detail about this point
in the next slides.
2 seconds.
The next points.
Now, another tip (which is very valuable)
especially if you're going to write your pie
chart using the four-paragraph model that
I'll explain in a few minutes.
What you need to do is learn how to paraphrase.
It's not a difficult task.
What it consists of is reorganizing the information
using a different structure, but still it
stays the same.
So for example, if we have some pie charts
and the title is "Holiday destination chosen
by Welsh people 1955-2005."
Your first sentence in this essay (if we're
following this four-paragraph model) will
just be a very, very simple paraphrase of
the title.
We're not complicating things, we're just
going to paraphrase it and we've got maybe
10% or 15% of the essay out of the way.
And it's a perfectly acceptable introduction.
So I'll just go over the title one more time:
"Holiday destination chosen by Welsh people
1955-2005."
Your first sentence:
"The pie chart shows/the pie charts show the
vacation preferences of Welsh people over
a fifty-year period starting in 1955 and finishing
in 2005."
Now, a side note here:
Learn the nationalities.
Learn that people from Vietnam are called
Vietnamese.
People from England are (obviously) English.
From Canada, Canadian.
From the United States, generally considered
American.
This is important because it just gives you
more flexibility when you're paraphrasing.
Because using the nationality is just saying
the same thing, and you can adopt it into
different structures.
So that just gives you a little bit more flexibility
there.
Now, those were some tips just regarding your
general preparation.
Now, if you're actually in the exam, what
I would like you to do is follow what I call
a three-step prep.
This is an adopted process/adopted model that
a friend of mine (Dominic).
On his blog Dominic: DCIELTS.com.
Go check that out.
I'll put the links in the post.
But here, I've adopted it from that.
And it's a very practical process you can
use for writing your IELTS Academic Task 1
pie chart.
First of all, what you do is 3 steps.
Step 1.
Prepare:
Look for the biggest and smallest sections.
Analyze the time, the dates, and the tenses,
and the measurements.
Is it in kilos?
Is it in kilos per hour?
Is it in square cubic feet?
(whatever)
Have a look at that data.
Also, when you're analyzing see the big picture.
Don't go for the details.
This is a summarizing task and I want you
to just have a look at the overall picture.
What is happening?
Are sales increasing?
Are they falling?
Has the portion increased?
Has it decreased?
And in this step 1, you look at it all and
then it's very important that you select and
report the main features.
Step 2.
Organize this information into 2 paragraphs.
So following the four-paragraph model, we've
got the first paragraph is a paraphrase of
the title.
And then we've got 2 body paragraphs.
And the first body paragraph, what we're going
to do is we're going to put the information
that we've organized in this step.
So here, we�re going to look for the:
Major trends
Major groups
Exceptions
We're going to group similar ideas together.
Now, it's going to be the first paragraph...
Paragraph 2 will also be similar.
These are your 2 body paragraphs where we
put the information that we've analyzed in
that 2nd step where we're putting it into
the paragraphs and we're going to write about
it.
It's basically deciding what we're going to
write about.
Then we write the essay using the template.
We've got the first...
Well, I'll explain the paragraph model in
a second...
In this stage when we're writing it, remember
to check for errors once you've finished.
And follow your essay plan.
If ideas pop into your head, ignore them.
Just follow your plan.
It'll keep you calm, it'll keep you on track,
it'll keep you within the time limit.
So don't deviate from that.
Now, that's the three-step plan.
Now, we're going to look at the template which
we can use to structure the actual final essay.
Paragraph 1 will be one sentence.
We're just going paraphrase the title.
Paragraph 2, groups of information from the
organization we did in step 2.
Paragraph 3, same groups of information collected
from the organization in step 2.
Paragraph 4 will be one or two summary sentences
showing the major overall trends from the
graph.
In this stage, we'll use the summary sentences
that I talked about at the very beginning.
So write these down:
Paragraph 1 is the paraphrase of the title.
Paragraph 2 and paragraph 3, we're going to
just put the groups of information that we've
organized previously.
And paragraph 4, 2 summary sentences.
The major overall trends.
So like I said before, the guide was adopted
from Dominic Cole's site: dcielts.com.
Have a look there.
Lots of detailed resources.
And also, if you haven't already, I strongly
recommend that you go to ieltspodcast.com.
Sign up there, leave your email, and you'll
get lots and lots of valuable resources.
And it's just pure content.
Pure step-by-step tutorials that I sent every
week to subscribers.
So yeah, that's one of the best things you
can do to guarantee your IELTS success.
If you're having any problems, send me an
email.
I've helped lots of students.
I enjoy helping them.
I love it when I get the emails back saying,
"I got an 8 and I'm going to Holland (wherever)."
So if you're going through a tough time, just
keep on working.
Keep doing it, and eventually you will get
there.
Trust me.
I've been in similar situations.
You just got to persevere.
So, all the best.
Remember to sign up and send me an email.
Tell me how it's going.
All the best.
Ben.
