Agreed. I did it in January and drifted a bit during the listening. Also, reading I was tight for time, despite being native, and I'm a law graduate so used to dealing with complex issues under time. The main thing is to concentrate and work fast as you would do if you weren't a native English speaker, then the benefit of your superiour English will come through! If you allow your concentration to take a back seat then the non-natives who are using 110% brain power in the exam will catch up with you despite their worse English!gizmo59 said:Hi Donutbox
I did the exam last week and found it on the whole to be pretty straightforward. In terms of the listening test, the main issue is concentration as you only hear the recording once, so if you drift off a bit you'll miss answers! I found the reading more difficult than I expected, and I've got a masters degree, so am fairly fluent really! There was one section in which we had to read a paper that was divided into sections and allocate the appropriate heading to each section. I found this difficult as I didn't think the headings matched particularly well. The writing was fairly straightforward I think, as was the speaking. I'll let you know when I get my marks though!
gizmo59 said:Hey Donutbox
Just to let you know I got a 9 for my IELTS test. I got 9s in all the sections apart from reading, for which I got an 8.5.
Does that set your mind at ease? I'm delighted. ;D