Hi. Welcome again to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. Today's lesson, we're looking at IELTS and TOEFL,
the writing section, and we're going to look at the five most common mistakes that
I see when I'm checking students' essays. Okay? Now, as usual, for the IELTS and TOEFL
lesson, I will speak a little bit more natural speed, a little bit faster than usual. If
you're a beginner, don't worry. Watch the video, listen, practice your listening. Get
It's all… It's good for everybody, but just a little bit harder. Okay?
So, now, where do I begin? I check a lot of essays. Okay? People send me their essays,
I check them, I edit them, I tell them what they're doing wrong, and I've come to the
realization that there are certain mistakes that many, many people make. So, I want to
tell you five of these common mistakes so that you can avoid making them. Okay?
And the first one-and this is the most common mistake that I see-is that you are trying
too hard. Now, what does this mean? Trying hard is a good thing, right? Yes, it is. But
you're trying too hard to sound impressive. Okay? You're trying to impress the graders
of these… Of these exams, IELTS and TOEFL, you think that by using big words or lots
of idioms, or very, very long sentences that are very complex and have many clauses that
you're getting a higher score. In fact, most of the times, you're actually hurting yourselves.
Why? Because you're using words incorrectly, you're using them inappropriately, meaning
in the wrong context or the wrong usage or in the wrong parts of speech; you're using
a verb when you should use a noun, etc. When you write very, very long sentences, quite
often, you have run-on sentences, mean… Meaning you have two independent clauses in
one sentence, and no punctuation, and no conjunctions, and then the whole sentence falls apart and
means nothing. And also, a lot of people use idioms because… Yeah, idioms will get you
extra points, but they're using them incorrectly or in the wrong context. Again, make sure
you know the words you're using, make sure you know the idioms you're using, and shorter
sentences can actually be better. Simple is often better than complex. If you think about…
As an analogy, if you think about cooking, the more spices you put into the dish, the
less you taste the actual meat or the actual core of the dish. Simple is best.
Let me give you an example. Here are two sentences. Okay? Let me read them to you.
"The CEO", Chief Executive Officer, like the head of the company… "The CEO's tenure at the company
was abbreviated due to his reluctance to integrate more females into upper managerial posts,
thereby drawing the ire of the Board who consequently relieved him of his duties."
Now, this sentence is perfectly okay. It's grammatically correct, all the words are being used correctly, but
if you can write a sentence like this the way that I wrote it here, then you don't need
to worry about the IELTS or the TOEFL; your English is obviously very high level. If you
can do this, then this test will be very easy for you.
However, a lot of people, a lot of test-takers try to write this sentence, and then they
end up making many, many mistakes. They don't use this word correctly: "abbreviated", they
say: "abbreviation". Okay? That's the more common thing of it. "Abbreviated" means made
shorter. Okay? "Reluctance", hesitance, like not really wanting to. This word: "ire". I
write all the time, I write for a living. I never use this word "ire", because it's
so old-fashioned. And also, it's a small word. Right? So you don't need many syllables, you
don't need very rare words. You need to be simple, you need to get your message across.
The most important part of the test is: Answer the question. They give you a task, answer
it. Answer it clearly, concisely. Means: Use fewer words, not more words. If you can say
the same thing in fewer words, get the message across, make it clear, make the reader interested,
then you'll get higher points than if you write something like this. Okay?
"The CEO's time was cut short because he wouldn't promote
women to top positions, which angered the Board who then fired him."
Okay, look at the two sentences. This sentence means exactly the same thing as this sentence.
Much shorter, much simpler words, much more direct delivery of the message. Now, "tenure", "time", same
thing. Tenure's a nice word, but if you're not going to use it correctly, then you're
going to lose points; not gain points. Better to write "time", and get the message across,
than to write "tenure" and use a word incorrectly, which means you don't actually know it, and
you make the whole sentence confusing to the reader. So you're actually doing two bad things.
We call this a "double-whammy", in case you need extra expressions.
you're hurting yourself twice. Okay? So don't do that.
"Ire", just say "angered". Now, if you can use the word "angered", this is a high-end word.
Now, you're thinking: "Angry? 'Angry' is not a high-end word." Yes, but I didn't
say "angry". I said "angered". If you could show the graders that you know this word so
well that you know how to use it as a verb… Because most people don't. Most people only
know "angry" or "anger", the noun. Very few people use this word as a verb. Use this word
as a verb, and you have your high-end vocabulary, you get your extra points. Use "ire" incorrectly
and you're actually losing points. Okay? Same idea, fewer words, simple words, the message
Now, for some reason people love this idiom:
"a double-edged sword". Everything is a double-edged sword.
The problem with a double-edged sword is that there's two sides to it, and most
people don't realize that. Right? If you're going to use an idiom, make sure you're using
it correctly. So, this idiom, "a double-edged sword" means that something, or a situation,
or an action has both a positive side and a negative side. So if you're going to use
this idiom, you better explain to the reader: What is the positive, what is the negative?
Okay? So, this sentence is a double-edged sword. If you can write it like this, then
yeah, you're getting a bonus point. But on the other side of it, if you write… If you
make any mistakes in it, you're losing points. So be very careful with vocabulary, extra
words that you don't need, and idioms.
Now, another thing: Long, complicated sentences. They don't need to be. Remember I said they're
run-on sentences? Now, another thing you have to worry about is redundancy. This is a big
word, but I'll write it here. If something is redundant, it means it's unnecessary.
"The CEO's tenure at the company", now, here you noticed I put "at the company". Here… Here,
I didn't put "the company". Why? A CEO is a head of a company, it's understood that
the time at the company. I don't actually need to say it. If you can use three words
to say something, don't use five. If you can use five, don't use 10. Less is more, just
like when you're putting on makeup. Another analogy, there, for you. Okay? So, this is
the most common mistake. Let's look at a few more.
Okay, so now we're a little bit busy, here, but I'll squeeze everything into one shot
so it's much easier for you. What I'm going to do, I'm going to begin by looking at a
very classic task, either IELTS or TOEFL will give it to you. "Parents make the best teachers."
Do you agree or disagree? Okay. You had your introduction, we're talking about parents,
we're talking about education, we're talking about children. Some people believe that parents
are the best, some people believe teachers are the best. I think that… I agree that
parents are the best teachers. Okay, your introduction's done.
Let's get into the first body paragraph. So, first, I'm going to read this to you. This
is not a complete paragraph, but you'll get the idea.
"Firstly, parents know their child best, including what he likes and doesn't like, such as books he likes to read, or favourite
science topics. Parents can also talk to the child's teachers and find out from them how
to help him at home. They can also monitor how much TV he watches, and cutting down on
this might help his concentration."
And on and on. Okay? I didn't give you the full paragraph.
Not necessary; you'll understand what I'm getting at.
So, common mistake number two: No topic sentence. If you look at this example, I don't know
what this paragraph is about. Right? A topic sentence is your introduction sentence to
the paragraph. It's very important to remember that one paragraph has one central idea. Okay?
This central idea must be presented right at the beginning of the paragraph so the reader
knows what to expect. So, in this sentence, we're talking about parents know their child,
they know what he likes and what he doesn't like, they know what books he likes, they
know what science topics he likes. What is this paragraph about? Is it about books? Is
it about choosing his books or choosing his science topics? Is it about parents know their
child? Is it about what he likes, what he doesn't like? I'm assuming that it's: Parents
know their child best. Okay? So it's about the parents' knowledge of the child. That
is what this paragraph is about. That is why they are the best teachers, because they know
their child. Put a period here, and then start with your reasons. This is your topic sentence.
This is what the paragraph is about. Stop, start giving me your support; start elaborating
on this key point, and giving me the details, reasons, examples, etc.
Too many ideas. So, this basically goes in line with the topic… No topic sentence.
So then, okay, they know what he likes, what he doesn't like, his books, etc. They can
also talk to the child's teachers and find out how they can help him. Okay, that's another
way they can do. So, teachers have nobody to ask. Or maybe they have the parents. Who
knows? So, parents know their child best, parents can talk to the child's teachers,
they can find… They can monitor how much TV he watches, so they can… This is something
else they can do. Doesn't have anything to do with what he likes or doesn't like. They
can concen-… They can help his concentration by cutting down on TV. Too many ideas, here.
Now, too many ideas is not a bad thing if each idea is expanded on, you elaborate, you
explain why this is important, and you have to connect. Right? Every sentence must flow
in terms of ideas, logically, from one idea to the next. So, here, this… This sentence
and this sentence really have no connection. Here, we're talking about what he likes; here
about what they can do with their teachers. Two completely separate ideas, not connected
by anything. Okay? Next, they can talk about TV. They can cut down on TV. Okay. What does
that have to do with talking to the child's teachers? Nothing. Again, no connection. Different
"Umm, what are you trying to do here? Like, what…? What is the purpose of this essay?
What is the purpose of this paragraph?" The point is you're
trying to support your idea, why you think parents are the best teacher.
Which brings us to point number four: Good point… So, you're making good points. There's
nothing wrong with the ideas, here; they're actually quite good, quite strong in terms
of supporting your opinion. But then you don't give me any examples. Okay? For example, if
you're talking about books, this is like already the second sentence, you're talking about
what books he likes, what science he likes… For example, if a child likes dinosaurs, the
parents can then go buy him a dinosaur set, a model set, or books about dinosaurs, or
they can take him to the museum to see… The Natural History Museum to see how dinosaurs
evolved, and died, and etc. Or if you're talking about TV, well, what's wrong with TV? TV can
be very educational. But for your purpose, you want to give the example. If the child
is watching too many cartoons or is watching violent movies, he's not going to be able
to concentrate on his math homework. Right? Or if his imagination is getting carried away,
how's he going to concentrate on his science lessons?
So, give me the points, yes, make sure that you give me concrete examples.
"Concrete" meaning give me a real thing, something I can actually hold onto. The dinosaur set,
concrete example. Cartoons on TV, concrete examples. Okay? Make sure you support your
reasons with examples. Make sure you support your argument with reasons. Everything has
to be connected. Better to take only one or two of these ideas, expand on them, and give
me examples to support them to make them stronger. Okay? So, this is the general idea about the
paragraphs in body one, body two. Same thing for body two. You're going to a new topic,
introduce it with a topic, make sure you have the transition between paragraph, body paragraph
one and two, topic sentence, reason you think so, example, maybe another point,
Now, this one, the last one. This is actually a bit of a pet peeve. I'll explain this expression.
A "pet peeve" is something that you find really annoying. Right? Something that happens all
the time, and it really bothers you. So I've had many students, and I've explained to them
this point-I'm going to explain to you in a second-and I say: "Don't do this." And then
their next essay, they do it again; and then their next essay, they do it again. Like,
you say: "Don't do it, don't do it", and they do it, and they do it. So, what is the problem?
Once you have your opinion, once you've decided agree or disagree, say so once. Okay? Use
this pronoun: "I agree", "I think", "I believe", "In my opinion" one time in the entire essay.
Do not say: "I think" two, three, four times. Don't say it twice in the introduction, and
then again in the conclusion. Say it one time in the introduction if that's where your thesis is
- that's it, you're done. Don't use the word: "I", "my", "me", "mine" any more in your essay.
The only time you can repeat the personal pronoun is if you have a very personal task
question. Would you prefer to live in the city or the country? Okay, in that case, you
can use "I", or "me", or "my" a few times, but even then, you don't need to, so don't.
One time, give me your opinion, that's it; don't give me any more.
Now, what happens is I see quite often in the introduction, I see people say:
"I think that A, B, C, which is why I believe C, D, E, F." Whatever.
Is it the first one or the second one? Right? Usually it will be a bit clear what you're
trying to say, but the fact that you say two opinions makes your thesis weak, because I'm
not sure. You're not taking a very firm stance. If you think A, B, C, which is why you believe
D, E, F - well, you only think A, B, C, which is not a very strong support for D, E, F or
believing D, E, F. Have one firm expression: "I think" something, done. Support it the
rest of the essay. In the conclusion, you can restate that opinion, but you don't have
to say: "That is why I think", "In conclusion, I think this because that". No.
"In conclusion, parents make the best teachers for several reasons,
including knowledge of their child and" whatever your second body paragraph was.
I don't know. Everybody has different ideas.
One time in the whole essay, that's it.
So, these are the five common mistakes people make. Try to avoid them.
Your score will go up right away, I can promise you that. If you have any questions, come to www.engvid.com,
you can ask me questions in the forum. I will put a quiz to make sure you understand the
key concepts, here. If you need extra help, please visit my site, www.writetotop.com,
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