IELTS Writing Real Practice Questions: How to Use Official Tasks Without Memorizing Essays
A realistic guide to practicing IELTS Writing Task 1 and Task 2 with official sample tasks, planning, review, and feedback.

Real IELTS Writing practice is not about memorizing beautiful essays. It is about learning how the task works.
IELTS official sample pages show the core difference between Academic and General Training Writing. Academic Task 1 asks you to describe, summarize, or explain visual information such as a graph, table, chart, or diagram. Task 2 asks you to write an essay responding to a point of view, argument, or problem. General Training Writing uses different task contexts, including letter writing.
Use the official sample pages for actual prompts:
Practice the task, not a template
Templates can help with structure, but they can also make your answer sound empty.
For every official Writing task, ask:
- What exactly is the task asking?
- Do I need to describe data, compare features, explain a process, write a letter, or argue a position?
- What information must be included?
- What should I leave out?
- What would make this answer clearer?
This is more useful than collecting model essays you never learn to produce.
Task 1: find the main features first
For Academic Task 1, many learners start with details too quickly. Before writing, identify:
- the biggest change
- the highest and lowest values
- the main comparison
- the overall trend
- any unusual point
Write the overview before worrying about small numbers.
Task 2: answer the question directly
For Task 2, review your essay against the prompt:
- Did I answer all parts of the question?
- Does each body paragraph have one clear idea?
- Are my examples specific?
- Did I repeat the prompt instead of developing an argument?
- Are grammar mistakes blocking meaning?
One honest paragraph review can be more useful than writing another full essay.
Use feedback carefully
If you use AI or a tutor, do not ask for every possible correction. Ask for the three most important changes.
Good prompt:
Review this IELTS Writing answer for task response, organization, and grammar that changes meaning. Give only the top three fixes.
Then rewrite the answer.
Where Gotostudy fits
At gotostudy.net, you can turn your writing prompt notes, teacher feedback, or mistake log into a study guide. You can ask an AI Tutor to quiz you on task requirements and save weak sentence patterns as flashcards.
Do not use it to generate essays to submit. Use it to understand why your answer is not working yet.
Bottom line
IELTS Writing real practice questions are valuable because they reveal how you plan, select ideas, organize paragraphs, and control language under time pressure.
Use official tasks slowly. Review one answer deeply. Rewrite. That is how writing practice becomes score improvement.
