TOEFL Writing for an Academic Discussion: How to Practice the Real Task Type
A practical guide to TOEFL Writing for an Academic Discussion practice, based on ETS official task information and focused on clear, relevant responses.

TOEFL Writing for an Academic Discussion is a real task type described by ETS in official TOEFL iBT test content and preparation resources. It asks you to contribute to an academic discussion, not write a memorized essay.
Use official ETS resources for real prompts and current details:
What this task really tests
The task is not only grammar. It tests whether you can:
- understand the discussion
- answer the exact question
- add a clear opinion
- support it with a reason or example
- connect your idea to the academic context
If your response is polished but irrelevant, it will not work.
A simple response structure
Use a short structure:
- State your position.
- Give one clear reason.
- Add a specific example or consequence.
- Connect back to the discussion.
Short and relevant is better than long and vague.
Review your answer
After writing, ask:
- Did I answer the professor's question?
- Did I repeat classmates instead of adding my own idea?
- Is my example specific?
- Can I remove one unnecessary sentence?
- Is the tone academic but natural?
Then rewrite once. Do not only read feedback.
Where Gotostudy fits
At gotostudy.net, you can turn your TOEFL writing drafts and feedback notes into a study guide, ask an AI Tutor to check whether your response answers the task, and save repeated weak patterns as flashcards.
Bottom line
TOEFL Academic Discussion practice improves when you stop chasing templates and start training relevance, clarity, and one strong supporting idea.
