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Nurses Guide To IELTS: Information About Everything From Booking Your IELTS Test To Receiving Your Test Score
Nurses Guide To IELTS: Information About Everything From Booking Your IELTS Test To Receiving Your Test Score
In order to work as a nurse in the UK, you must register with the NMC
(www.nmc.org.uk). After 18th January 2016 all nurses applying to the NMC must
submit evidence of their qualifications as well as evidence of that their knowledge
of English meets the standards set in 2003.
In November 2003 following a public consultation and evidence from the British
Council, the NMC made the decision that an IELTS score of 7 would be the lowest
level acceptable for language skills.
You will need to get a score of 7 in all four sections; listening, reading, writing and
speaking.
You can take the test in two sittings and present two IELTS test certificates that
show you have a level 7 in all four sections, but these certificates cannot have
anything below a 6.5 on them.
If you decide to take the test in two settings, you must make sure that the two
tests are taken within 6 months of each other.
Example:
If you took an IELTS in May 2016 and achieved:
Speaking 7
Writing 7
Reading 6.5
Listening 6.5
Writing 6.5
Reading 7
Listening 7
you could use the scores from both tests to meet the NMC application requirement.
IELTS before or after NMC application?
You can’t complete your NMC application and get your PIN unless you have taken
the IELTS test and passed all 4 sections with a level 7.
If you take your IELTS test after you have started your NMC application, you only
have 90 days in which to get a level 7 in all 4 sections.
After this time, your NMC application has lapsed and you will have to re-apply.
Please remember that when you apply to the NMC there is a fee!
When you complete your application and send it back to the NMC, you
need to pay £110 to cover administration costs.
Once your application has been accepted, you need to pay £120, which is
the registration fee.
Total: £230
If you let your NMC application lapse, you will have to pay £230 and begin your
application again.
If you take your IELTS test before you begin your NMC application, and do not
achieve a level 7 in all 4 sections, you can re-take the test until you do get level 7
as there are no time constraints.
So, if you came to the UK and began working as a Senior Carer whilst you were
preparing to take your IELTS, not only would you be getting extra practice from
speaking English at work, you do not have the risk of your NMC application
running out!
Why work as a Senior Carer and not wait until I am a nurse?
Employers need nurses, so if you start working as a Senior Carer/Pre-PIN nurse,
you will gain experience in the work environment. Then, when you get your PIN,
you will already know your colleagues and surroundings really well (and your
salary will increase)!
You have been given this job because your employer knows that you can become
a registered nurse within the time-frame set by the NMC and then start working
as a nurse as soon as possible. This means that passing IELTS and completing your
NMC application is very important!
IELTS Test Format
It is important that you make some time to go through the IELTS test format to
get an understanding of it.
The first three sections are completed on the same day, with no break in
between. The three sections take place in the following order: Listening, Reading,
Writing and Speaking.
The speaking test takes place either on that same day or a week before or after.
This will depend on local arrangements.
Please be aware that in the listening test, a variety of native-speaking accents are
used; North American, Australian, New Zealand and British.
All standard varieties of English are accepted in responses in all parts of the test.
The LISTENING test consists of 4 recordings. You will have 30 minutes to answer
and 10 extra minutes to transfer your answer to the answer sheet provided.
The READING test is 60 minutes. You need to read 3 long passages of text from
authentic publications and complete the tasks as requested. The texts range from
factual information to descriptive text and can include diagrams, graphs and
illustrations.
The WRITING test is also 60 minutes. You must write at least 150 words that
explain a table/diagram/graph/chart. You will also be required to write a small
essay of at least 250 words.
The SPEAKING test is 11 – 14 minutes long and involves a face-to-face interview
where you will be asked short questions as well as speaking at length about a
topic and also a structured discussion.
Where can you take the IELST Test and how much will it cost?
Book the test in your local British Council Office, or if you would rather come to
the UK and take the test, book it in one of the 45 British Council Offices listed.
Country Cost Where?
Austria €225 Vienna, Graz, Innsbruck, Klagenfurt and Salzburg
Belgium €215 Brussels
Bulgaria BGN 385.00 Sofia, Varna, Plovdiv, Burgas, Veliko Tarnovo and Ruse,
Croatia 1,610.00 HRK Zagreb and Split
Cyprus € 195 Nicosia
Czech CZK 5100 Brno and Prague
Republic
Denmark DKK 1,875 Copenhagen
Estonia €180 Tallinn University
Finland €250 Helsinki and Lappeenranta
France €220 Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Nantes and Lille
Germany €220 Munich, Freiburg, Stuttgart, Mannheim, Nuremburg, Frankfurt, Leipzig, Cologne,
Aachen, Dortmund, Hanover, Berlin, Hamburg, Bremen
Greece €195 Thessaloniki, Komotini, Ioannina, Volos, Patras, Athens
Hungary HUF 56,000 (Fees Budapest
from 1 April 2017
is HUF 59,500)
Ireland Lisburn, Belfast, Bangor, Northern Ireland
Italy €225 (Fees from Milano, Genoa, Turin, Trento, Verona, Modena, Bologna, Venice, Padua, Udine,
1 April 2017 is Trieste, Pisa, Florence, Siena, Perugia, Ancona, Viterbo, Rome, Pescara, Cassino,
€230) Campobasso, Naples, Bari, Lecce, Catanzaro, Cosenza, Reggio di Calabria, Messina,
Catania, Enna, Ragusa, Palermo, Sassari, Cagliari
Latvia €180 Riga
Luxembourg €227 Luxembourg
Lithuania €184 Šiauliai, Klaipeda, Vilnius
Malta €188 Valletta
Netherlands €215 Utrect, Eindhoven, Amsterdam
Poland PLN 745 Gdansk, Krakow, Lublin, Poznań, Szczecin, Warsaw, Katowice and Wroclaw
Portugal €205 Coimbra, Madeira, Porto
Romania 760 RON Bucharest, Iasi, Cluj and Timisoara
Slovakia €194 Bratislava, Kosice and Trnava
Slovenia €225 Ljubljana
Spain €210 Palma de Mallorca, Girona, Barcelona, Tarragona, Zaragoza, Valencia, Donostia-San
Sebastián, Pamplona, Bilbao, Burgos, Santander, Oviedo, Leon, Valladolid, Avila,
Salamanca, Santiago de Compostela, Vigo, A Coruña, Alcalá de Henares, Madrid,
Cáceres, Badajoz, Ciudad Real, Alicante, Murcia, La Rioja, Córdoba, Granada, Sevilla,
Marbella, Málaga,
Sweden 2400 SEK Lund and Gothenburg
UK £160 London, Liverpool, Eastbourne, Edinburgh, Derry, Canterbury, Coventry, Chelmsford,
Cambridge, Bristol, Burton-on-Trent, Brighton, Bournemouth, Birmingham, Bedford,
Bath, Belfast, Bangor, Aberystwyth, Aberdeen, Exeter, Glasgow, Hastings, Guildford,
Harrogate, Leeds, Leicester, Lisburn, Manchester, Liverpool, Newcastle, Oxford,
Norwich, Nottingham, Portsmouth, Peterborough, Plymouth, Sheffield, Reading,
Rugby, Southampton, Sunderland, Torquay, Wrexham, York
How to book your IELTS test
1. Go to http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/book-your-test/book-now. From
here, select your country, or the country you wish to take the IELTS test in,
from the drop-down menu.
2. On the page of the country you have selected, you will be given the
locations of the test centres, the price of the test and an IELTS test booking
checklist.
3. You will need to have your ID documents and payment details with you
when you are booking the test.
4. Once you are ready, with all your ID documents, you need to complete the
application form.
5. Booking online (where available) is recommended as this is the most
efficient way to reserve your IELTS test with a British Council Test Centre.
6. List the details of five organisations that you would like your Test Report
Form sent to.
7. You must ensure you inform your test centre if you have any disabilities or
other conditions as soon as possible in order to accommodate any
requirements on the day of your test. If you are booking online, make this
clear in your application.
8. When you submit your application, make a note of any instructions you are
given and ensure you carry these out.
Revise!
There are plenty of free resources to help you revise:
The Reading Practice Test
http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/Reading_Practice_1_IELTS_A
cademic_Questions.pdf
Example of the sheet you will be given to record your answers:
The Writing Practice Test
http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/Writing_practice_test_1_IEL
TS_Academic_questions.pdf
Candidate Number
Academic Writing
Time 1 hour
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
Do not open this question paper until you are told to do so.
Write your name and candidate number in the spaces at the top of this page.
Read the instructions for each task carefully.
Answer both of the tasks.
Write at least 150 words for Task 1.
Write at least 250 words for Task 2.
Write your answers in the answer booklet.
Write clearly in pen or pencil. You may make alterations, but make sure your work is easy to read.
At the end of the test, hand in both this question paper and your answer booklet.
The graphs below give information about computer ownership as a percentage of the population be-
tween 2002 and 2010, and by level of education for the years 2002 and 2010.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features, and make comparisons
where relevant.
A person’s worth nowadays seems to be judged according to social status and material possessions.
Old-fashioned values, such as honour, kindness and trust, no longer seem important.
Give reasons for your answer and include any relevant examples from your own knowledge or expe-
rience.
The bar charts show data about computer ownership, with a further classification by level of education,
from 2002 to 2010.
A steady but significant rise can be seen in the percentage of the population that owned a computer
over the period. Just over half the population owned computers in 2002, whereas by 2010 three out of
four people had a home computer.
An analysis of the data by level of education shows that higher levels of education correspond to higher
levels of computer ownership in both of those years. In 2002, only around 15% of those who did not
finish high school had a computer but this figure had trebled by 2010. There were also considerable
increases, of approximately 30 percentage points, for those with a high school diploma or an unfinished
college education (reaching 65% and 85% respectively in 2010). However, graduates and postgraduates
proved to have the greatest level of ownership in 2010, at 90% and 95% respectively, 20 percentage
points higher than in 2002.
The last decade has seen a substantial growth in computer ownership in general, and across all
educational levels.
It is apparent that most celebrities today are admired or envied solely for their material wealth or po-
sition in various social hierarchies. Many of these people are known to turn their backs on friends,
cheat on their spouses or spend their evenings over-indulging in alcohol and/or drugs. Things like
owning a mansion, driving an expensive car and getting into A-list parties are exalted above old-
fashioned values. Ultimately, though, it is the many readers of gossip magazines and celebrity blogs
who reinforce these ideas.
Nevertheless, I do believe that in their day-to-day lives most people still believe in values such as
honour, kindness and trust. In some way most of us want to form loving families, raise our children to
be good citizens, stand up for the downtrodden and protect our communities from harm. We still form
friendships, romances and business partnerships based on old-fashioned criteria. When our trust is
abused or we are unfairly treated, we see that as a major violation of our relationship and we judge
the wrongdoer accordingly.
In conclusion, I believe there is some truth to the notion that status and possessions have super-
seded old-fashioned values as a measure of a person’s worth. Looking beyond the tabloids, how-
ever, it is apparent that most ordinary people have still preserved an old-fashioned conscience.
The Listening Practice Test
http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/Listening_practice_questions
_121012.pdf
For each part of the test, there will be time for you to look through the questions
and time for you to check your answers.
When you have completed all four parts of the Listening test you will have ten
minutes to copy your answers on to a separate answer sheet.
The audio clips for you to listen to for this part of the practice test can be found
here:
Section 1: http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/prepare-test/free-sample-
tests/listening-sample-test-1/listening-section-1
Section 2: http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/prepare-test/free-sample-
tests/listening-sample-test-1/listening-section-2
Section 3: http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/prepare-test/free-sample-
tests/listening-sample-test-1/listening-section-3
Section 4: http://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/prepare-test/free-sample-
tests/listening-sample-test-1/listening-section-4
Note that these are not model answers, so do not try to imitate them.
Please remember that you will have 10 minutes after the Listening section to fill
in your answer sheet.
The sheet you will be given to write your answers on will look like this:
The Speaking Practice Test
It would be a good idea to practice with someone else, so you can speak with
each other.
Person A can ask the following questions whilst Person B answers, then swap.
Can you tell me about the kind of accommodation you live in?
It is important that you speak clearly and fluently. Say as much as you can, make
the conversation flow – you should not memorise answers and repeat them like a
robot!
Practice makes perfect!
It is a good idea to record yourself whilst speaking – this means you can play it
back to yourself and hear how you sound!
Do you sound natural? Have you said everything that you wanted to say? Did it
come across in the right way?
There are no right or wrong answers – you just need to be able to speak clearly
and fluently and understand the questions.
https://takeielts.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/IELTS_Notice_to_Ca
ndidates_0.pdf
On the day of the Test:
Switch off any mobile phones or portable devices you may have. These
must be left outside the test room.
The Listening, Reading and Writing tests take 2 hours 40 minutes and there
are no breaks between the tests.
You are not allowed food in the test room, so you should eat something
before you go. You will be allowed a drink as long as it is in a clear bottle.
Identity
Make sure you bring your ID with you – staff will be checking ID when you arrive.
If you do not bring the right form of ID with you, you won’t be allowed to take the
test.
Those taking the test in their own country might have to show their current
passport – you will need to check with the test centre you will be taking the test
in to see which form of ID you need.
You may also have to bring with you 2 recent, identical, passport sized
photographs
Whichever form of ID you use MUST be in date at the time of your test.
Some test centres now take photographs of you on the test day which will go on
your Test Report to improve security.
If the test centre you go to does take photographs, they will let you know before.
You can only bring a pen or pencil, an eraser and your ID with you into the test
room.
During the test make sure that you follow all the instructions properly.
Don’t forget that the Writing Test asks you to write a specific amount of
words.
Make full use of the time allocated for each question – there will be a clock
in each test room so that you know how much time you have left.
Most importantly, make sure you stay calm and focus on the questions.
You need to stay seated until you are told you can leave the room.
If you think there has been any issues that could have affected how you did the
test, you should tell the invigilator right away.
If you feel that something wasn’t right and you want to make any complaints
about your test day, you must do so within 7 days of your test date.
You could also ask your invigilator for a Test Day Incident Form to make a
complaint – they will have these forms with them on the day.
IELTS results
You will get your results 13 days after you have taken your test.
The results will be put onto a Test Report Form. You will only get one Test Report
Form, so it is important that you keep it safe!
If you chose to have your Test Report Form sent to any organisations, this will be
done free of charge.
You can see your results online before the Test Report Form gets sent out to you.
Some centres can also send an SMS message to you.
If you didn’t get the results you hoped for, you will need to re-sit your IELTS test.
You can book your test whenever you are ready to, and, there is no limit on the
amount of tests you can take.
If you are going to re-take your test, make sure you read through your previous
results to see which parts you need to improve on.
Make sure you understand your score and how the test works and most
importantly PRACTICE!
Listen to English radio and watch English TV, speak with English colleagues and
friends.
We hope this guide has helped you to understand the IELTS Test.
Good luck!