Thanks for reply , as not every one could be fortunate to get a partner like you , please check if you could share your tricks with us.
Thanks
RR
If you really need a CLB10 you might put yourself on a rough spot as it is not easy to deal with the pressure of having to achieve a high score to stand a chance at the express entry pool, however it is not impossible (at least I managed to do it), but sadly I feel there is a bit of luck involved.
There are a lot of resources in youtube and internet in general, try to identify your weakness and slowly work your way up. Familiarize with the test, practice your listening a lot, read the tips for writing and speaking parts and learn how to approach questions in the reading section, especially the "true/yes, false/no, not given" ones since those are very tricky.
Personally I was between the 7.5-8 band for listening while practicing and got the 8.5 needed for the CLB10, and 8 reading band while practicing and got a whooping 9 the day of the test, for the speaking and writing part it is quite hard to evaluate yourself and your best bet is to find a partner to practice, ideally with a similar level, so you can help, practice and correct each other assuming you are both quite proficient in the language.
Always remember this, it is more of a "how well you can take the test and how much you know how to tackle it", rather than "how much english you know or how good you are with it", I have seen native speakers perform poorly and average English users tearing it apart.
Best of luck if you decide to take it.
Fun fact: This post is a bit past 250 words, which is the request for task 2 (essay) of the written part.
