雅思英語師資介紹
A. 雅思英語老師孫麗娜
第一次雅思單詞考試總結之孫麗娜
轉眼之間假期就過去一半了,全休的時間過的總是那麼快,又到了該學習的時候了。
對於我們來說,背單詞已不是什麼新鮮事,但是在寶貴的假期背單詞真的很讓人痛苦,已經有一個月沒看書了,字都不會寫了,考試前兩周拿起單詞書,總是集中不了注意力,寫一會,思想跳一會。背的效率極差,一天背過的單詞屈指可數,記住的也寥寥無幾。回想起在學校一天背七十多個也不在話下,到底還是態度問題。在家總是學不進去,總想著玩。好像潛意識里就認為只有在學校才應該學習。不知道大家是不是也一樣有這種感覺,總之我的很強烈。
不停的期待假期,假期來了,瘋玩了幾天以後發現每一天都很無聊。又想著開學雖然累但是很充實從不因虛度而感到心不安。這個感覺相信大家多多少少都有吧。每天晚上不睡白天不起,作息時間嚴重混亂,整個人被電腦輻射弄的昏昏沉沉。說實話,無聊的時候人容易悲哀也容易胡思亂想,那樣很累。偶爾還會期盼快點開學忙起來。
時間一天天過去了,剩一周就考試,我手裡的單詞書還是很厚很厚,曾經很熟悉的那些單詞也因為長時間不看都陌生了,才想起老師總是說學習是個持續的過程,中間不能斷。早知道當初聽老師的話,現在也不用這么吃力,不過,臨陣磨槍也會有點作用吧。一周呢,努力一下會記住不少單詞的。於是,硬著頭皮開始繼續背單詞。雖然效率還是欠佳,但是總還是有些效果的。這些天也沒有把全部的時間花費在玩樂上,所以就會覺得很充實很踏實。看來學習的好處挺多嘛。
17號了,要考試了,緊張的坐在電腦前等老師發題,聽到聽力的時候還是凌亂了,一是因為讀的太快來不及寫,二是因為打字不方便。總之狀況百出。聽力半個多小時,我都覺得頭上,手心都是汗。心裡又著急又害怕。想著在家考試沒有了老師的監督,一定會輕松很多,但是我當初想的太簡單了!哪來的那麼多時間啊!同學們也都是各種混亂,一會人找不見,一會題找不見,總之當時緊張又混亂,群裡面就像炸開鍋一樣。弄得人心煩意亂的,但是又害怕通知東西不敢屏蔽,就那麼糾結的忍受著。
終於考完了,舒了一口氣,心裡的一塊石頭也落地了。把答卷發給組長的那一刻真的是整個人都清醒了不少,一方面是成就感,另一方面就是任務完成了。不過總結教訓,為了下次考試不那麼倉促忙亂,我還是決定把任務落實在每一天,臨時抱佛腳風險太大,而且太應付任務了。
通過這次的假期單詞考試,我還是有不少收獲的,不僅僅是臨陣磨槍記會的為數不多的單詞,也有自己沒認真看書的愧疚感。吃一塹,長一智。下次,一定不能那麼手忙腳亂了。希望大家都一起加油!
B. 哪位英語英文高手把雅思給我介紹一下
雅思考試又稱IELTS,主要是由英國劍橋大學研製為了檢測以非英語為母語的人們英文水專平的測試。考屬試分為:學術卷(Academic)用於出國留學深造的,每個學校或機構對於成績的要求都不一樣。 培訓卷(General Training)用於出國定居或移民的。選擇那個考試看個人情況。
雅思考試分為:
聽力:共4個section(大約半小時時間+10分鍾謄答案)
閱讀:學術和培訓不同,共三篇文章,1小時時間
寫作:學術:客觀寫作(圖表題,20分鍾)主觀的Task(40分鍾)
培訓:書信(20分鍾)+主觀的Task(40分鍾)
口語:10—15分鍾
section 1:你問我答
section2:自我獨白
section3:問題深入討論
C. 英文介紹,托福和雅思的區別
托福和雅思都是針對非英語國家人士的語言能力考試
一般來說去北美主專要考托福,去屬英聯邦國家就考雅思
兩者都是考英語的聽說讀寫,目前托福是採用機考,而雅思還是筆試+口語面試的形式。
TOEFL and IELTS is for non native speakers of Englishlanguage proficiency test
In general to major North American TOEFL, go to theCommonwealth countries have IELTS
Both test English, TOEFL test is used at present, and IELTS oral or written + interview form.
D. 請介紹一下劍橋雅思英語
要看你是什麼程度了,其實1—3題型比較老了,有些題型也根本不會出了,專但作為平時訓練還屬是可以的。4-6還是很不錯的,認真做題,仔細分析。每本書又4個A類的test和兩個G類的reading和wrinting
我是在淘寶上買的DAO版,很便宜
給你一個網站,上面是劍橋1-6的書,PDF格式,你可以下載看看,如果覺得好就買,下載下來看也不錯,就是有人不習慣在電腦上做題而已。
http://bbs.topsage.com/dispbbs.asp?boardID=63&ID=159845
E. 請英文老師看雅思的作文,thanks
1 I personally think that having a break between university graation and working life is better as the indivial is more mature.
2 Anyway, you get all your points in pros and cons addressed. However, the points should be organised in such a way it is more coherence and easier to read and understood by the reader/marker.
3 One point, I do not understand is, are you asking the student to co-habitate ring the one year break to become housewife?
4 stimulated to work or travel, may be motivated to work or travel is better
5 you had use words like stimulated, subsequently, meanwhile, consequently. I think you used for the sake of using and end up they just do not fit into the sentences.
6 adopt themselvies, write, for personal maintenance
7 you tried to write as much as possible, but your sentence structure is 'broken'. You must write in such a way that when the reader reads it, it is 'smooth' and coherent. This is especially in paragraph, ' In other hand,......『 I find this paragraph very messy.
Final coment; I am not sure what level you are writing at? CET8? or English teacher standard? If yes, your standard is below par.
F. 雅思 用英語介紹李小龍
慢慢看吧,相當全。
Bruce Jun Fan Lee (27 November 1940 – 20 July 1973) was a Chinese martial artist, philosopher, instructor, martial arts actor and the founder of the Jeet Kune Do combat form. He was widely regarded as the most influential martial artist of the twentieth century and a cultural icon.[1] He was also the father of actor Brandon Lee and of actress Shannon Lee.
Lee was born in San Francisco, California, and raised in Hong Kong until his late teens. His Hong Kong and Hollywood-proced films elevated the traditional Hong Kong martial arts film to a new level of popularity and acclaim, and sparked the first major surge of interest in Chinese martial arts in the West. The direction and tone of his films changed and influenced martial arts and martial arts films in Hong Kong and the rest of the world as well.
Lee became an iconic figure particularly to the Chinese, as he portrayed Chinese national pride and Chinese nationalism in his movies.[2] He primarily practiced Chinese martial arts (Kung fu), particularly Wing Chun.
[edit] Early life
Lee Jun Fan was born in the hour of the dragon, between 6–8 a.m., in the Year of the Dragon according to the Chinese zodiac calendar, November 27, 1940, at the Chinese Hospital in San Francisco』s Chinatown.[3] His father, Lee Hoi-Chuen (李海泉), was Chinese, and his Catholic mother, Grace (何愛瑜), was of Chinese and German ancestry.[4][5][6][7][8][9] Lee and his parents returned to Hong Kong when he was three months old. He was an American citizen by birth[10][11].
[edit] Ecation and family
At age 19, Lee entered La Salle College and later he attended St. Francis Xavier's College. In 1959, at the age of 18, Lee got into a fight and badly beat his opponent, getting into trouble with the police.[12] His father became concerned about young Bruce's safety, and as a result, he and his wife decided to send Bruce to the United States to live with an old friend of his father's. Lee left with $100 in his pocket and the titles of 1958 Boxing Champion and the Crown Colony Cha Cha Champion of Hong Kong.[3] He relocated to the United States through his citizenship to earn an ecation. After living in San Francisco, he moved to Seattle to work for Ruby Chow, another friend of his father's. In 1959, Lee completed his high school ecation in Seattle and received his diploma from Edison Technical School. He enrolled at the University of Washington and studied philosophy, drama , and psychology, among other subjects.[13][14][15] It was at the University of Washington that he met his future wife Linda Emery, whom he would marry in 1964.
He had two children with Linda, Brandon Lee (1965–1993) and Shannon Lee (1969-). Brandon, who also became an actor like his father, died in an accident ring the filming of The Crow in 1993. Shannon Lee also became an actress and appeared in some low-budget films starting in the mid 1990s, but has since quit acting.
[edit] Names
This article contains Chinese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.
Lee's Cantonese given name was Jun Fan (振藩; Mandarin Pinyin: Zhènfán).[16] At his birth, he additionally was given the English name of "Bruce" by a Dr. Mary Glover. Though Mrs. Lee had not initially planned on an English name for the child, she deemed it appropriate and would concur with Dr. Glover's addition.[17] However, his American name was never used within his family until he enrolled in La Salle College (a Hong Kong high school) at the age of 12,[16] and again at another high school (St. Francis Xavier's College in Kowloon), where Lee would come to represent the boxing team in inter-school events.
Lee initially had the birth name Li Yuen Kam[2] (李炫金); Mandarin Pinyin: Lǐ Xuànjīn) given to him by his mother, as at the time, Lee's father was away on a Chinese opera tour. This name would later be abandoned because of a conflict with the name of Bruce's grandfather, causing him to be renamed Jun Fan upon his father's return. Also of note is that Lee was given a feminine name, Sai Fung (細鳳, literally "small phoenix"), which was used throughout his early childhood in keeping with a Chinese custom, traditionally thought to hide a child from evil spirits.
Lee's screen names were respectively Lee Siu Lung (in Cantonese), and Li Xiao Long (in Mandarin) (李小龍; Cantonese pengyam: Ley5 Siu² Long4; Mandarin Pinyin: Lǐ Xiǎolóng) which literally translates to "Lee the Little Dragon" in English. These names were first used by director 袁步雲 of the 1950 Cantonese movie 細路祥, in which Lee would perform. It is possible that the name "Lee Little Dragon" was based on his childhood name of "small dragon", as, in Chinese tradition, the dragon and phoenix come in pairs to represent the male and female genders respectively. The more likely explanation is that he came to be called "Little Dragon" because, according to the Chinese zodiac, he was born in the Year of the Dragon.
[edit] Acting career
Lee's father Hoi-Chuen was a famous Cantonese Opera star. Thus, through his father, Bruce was introced into films at a very young age and appeared in several short black-and-white films as a child. Lee had his first role as a baby who was carried onto the stage. By the time he was 18, he had appeared in twenty films.[3]
While in the United States from 1959–1964, Lee abandoned thoughts of a film career in favor of pursuing martial arts. However, after Lee's high-profile martial arts demonstration at the 1964 Long Beach Karate Tournament, he was seen by some of the nation's most proficient martial artists—as well as the hairdresser of Batman procer William Dozier.[citation needed] Dozier soon invited Lee for an audition, where Lee so impressed the procers with his lightning-fast moves that he earned the role of Kato alongside Van Williams in the TV series The Green Hornet. The show lasted just one season, from 1966 to 1967. Lee also played Kato in three crossover episodes of Batman. This was followed by guest appearances in a host of television series, including Ironside (1967) and Here Come the Brides (1969).
A painting of Bruce Lee as he appeared in filmIn 1969, Lee made a brief appearance in his first American film Marlowe where he played a henchman hired to intimidate private detective Philip Marlowe (played by James Garner) by smashing up his office with leaping kicks and flashing punches, only to later accidentally jump off a tall building while trying to kick Marlowe off. In 1971, Lee appeared in four episodes of the television series Longstreet as the martial arts instructor of the title character Mike Longstreet (played by James Franciscus). Bruce would later pitch a television series of his own tentatively titled The Warrior. Lee's concept was retooled and renamed Kung Fu, but Warner Bros. gave Lee no credit.[18]Instead the role of the Shaolin monk in the Wild West, known to have been conceived by Bruce,[19] was awarded to then non-martial artist David Carradine because of the studio's fears that a Chinese leading man would not be embraced by a then vastly white American public.[20]
Not happy with his supporting roles in the U.S., Lee returned to Hong Kong and was offered a film contract by legendary director Raymond Chow to star in films proced by his proction company Golden Harvest. Lee played his first leading role in The Big Boss (1971) which proved an enormous box office success across Asia and catapulted him to stardom. He soon followed up his success with two more huge box office successes: Fist of Fury (1972) and Way of the Dragon (1972). For Way of the Dragon, he took complete control of the film's proction as the writer, director, star, and choreographer of the fight scenes. In 1964, at a demonstration in Long Beach, California, Lee had met karate champion Chuck Norris. In Way of the Dragon Lee introced Norris to moviegoers as his opponent in the final death fight at the Colosseum in Rome, today considered one of Lee's most legendary fight scenes.
In 1973, Lee played the lead role in Enter the Dragon, the first film to be proced jointly by Golden Harvest and Warner Bros. This film would skyrocket Lee to fame in the U.S. and Europe. However, only a few months after the film's completion and three weeks before its release, the supremely fit Lee mysteriously died. Enter the Dragon would go on to become one of the year's highest grossing films and cement Lee as a martial arts legend. It was made for US$850,000 in 1973 (equivalent to $4 million adjusted for inflation as of 2007).[21] To date, Enter the Dragon has grossed over $200 million worldwide.[22] The movie sparked a brief fad in the martial-arts, epitomized in such songs as "Kung Fu Fighting" and such TV shows as Kung Fu.
Robert Clouse, the director of Enter the Dragon, and Raymond Chow attempted to finish Lee's incomplete film Game of Death which Lee was also set to write and direct. Lee had shot over 100 minutes of footage, including outtakes, for Game of Death before shooting was stopped to allow him to work on Enter the Dragon. Kareem Abl-Jabbar, a student of Lee, also appeared in the film, which culminates in Lee's character, Hai Tien (clad in the now-famous yellow track suit) taking on the 7'2" basketball player in a climactic fight scene. In a controversial move, Robert Clouse finished the film using a look-alike and archive footage of Lee from his other films with a new storyline and cast, which was released in 1979. However, the cobbled-together film contained only fifteen minutes of actual footage of Lee (he had printed many unsuccessful takes[23]) while the rest had a Lee look-alike, Tai Chung Kim, and Yuen Biao as stunt double. The unused footage Lee had filmed was recovered 22 years later and included in the documentary Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey.
[edit] Challengers on the set
Lee's celebrity and martial arts prowess often put him on a collision course with a number of street thugs, stunt men and martial arts extras, all hoping to make a name for themselves. Lee typically defused such challenges without fighting, but felt forced to respond to several persistent indivials.
Bob Wall, USPK karate champion and co-star in Enter the Dragon, recalled a particularly serious encounter that transpired after a film extra kept taunting Lee. The extra yelled that Lee was "a movie star, not a martial artist," that he "wasn't much of a fighter." Lee answered his taunts by asking him to jump down from the wall he was sitting on. Bob Wall described Lee's opponent as "a gang-banger type of guy from Hong Kong," a "damned good martial artist," and observed that he was fast, strong, and bigger than Bruce.[24]
Wall recalled the confrontation in detail:
"This kid was good. He was strong and fast, and he was really trying to punch Bruce's brains in. But Bruce just methodically took him apart."[25] "Bruce kept moving so well, this kid couldn't touch him...Then all of a sudden, Bruce got him and rammed his ass into the wall and swept him, he proceeded to drop his knee into his opponent's chest, locked his arm out straight, and nailed him in the face repeatedly."[26]
After his victory, Lee gave his opponent lessons on how to improve his fighting skills. His opponent, now impressed, would later say to Lee, "You really are a master of the martial arts."[25]
[edit] Hong Kong legacy
Sculpture of Bruce Lee at the Avenue of Stars, Hong KongThere are a number of stories (perhaps apocryphal) surrounding Lee that are still repeated in Hong Kong culture today. One is that his early 70s interview on the TVB show Enjoy Yourself Tonight cleared the busy streets of Hong Kong as everyone was watching the interview at home.
His moment of birth is often used as a modern cultural proof of the existence of the Four Pillars of Destiny concept, having been born in the year of the Dragon, in the hour of the Dragon, along with other astrological alignment.[citation needed]
On January 6, 2009, it was announced that Bruce's Hong Kong home will be preserved and transformed into a tourist site by philanthropist Yu Pang-lin.[27]
[edit] Martial arts training and development
Lee's first introction to martial arts was through his father, Lee Hoi Cheun. He learned the fundamentals of Wu style Tai Chi Chuan from his father.[28] Lee's sifu, Wing Chun master Yip Man, was also a colleague and friend of Hong Kong's Wu style Tai Chi Chuan teacher Wu Ta-ch'i.
Lee trained in Wing Chun Gung Fu from age 13–18 under Hong Kong Wing Chun Sifu Yip Man. Lee was introced to Yip Man in early 1954 by William Cheung, then a live-in student of Yip Man. Like most Chinese martial arts schools at that time, Sifu Yip Man's classes were often taught by the highest ranking students. One of the highest ranking students under Yip Man at the time was Wong Shun-Leung. Wong is thought to have had the largest influence on Bruce's training. Yip Man trained Lee privately after some students refused to train with Lee e to his ancestry.[29]
Bruce was also trained in Western boxing and won the 1958 Boxing Championship match against 3-time champion Gary Elms by knockout in the 3rd round. Before arriving to the finals against Elms, Lee had knocked out 3 straight boxers in the first round.[30] In addition, Bruce learned western fencing techniques from his brother Peter Lee, who was a champion fencer at the time.[31] This multi-faceted exposure to different fighting arts would later play an influence in the creation of the eclectic martial art Jeet Kune Do.
[edit] Jun Fan Gung Fu
Main article: Jun Fan Gung Fu
Lee began teaching martial arts after his arrival in the United States in 1959. Originally trained in Wing Chun Gung Fu, Lee called what he taught Jun Fan Gung Fu. Jun Fan Gung Fu (literally Bruce's Gung Fu), is basically a slightly modified approach to Wing Chun Gung Fu.[32] Lee taught friends he met in Seattle, starting with Judo practitioner Jesse Glover as his first student and who later became his first assistant instructor. Before moving to California, Lee opened his first martial arts school, named the Lee Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute, in Seattle.
Lee also improvised his own kicking method, involving the directness of Wing Chun and the power of Northern Shaolin kung fu. Lee's kicks were delivered very quickly to the target, without "chambering" the leg.
[edit] Jeet Kune Do
The Jeet Kune Do Emblem. The Chinese characters around the Taijitu symbol indicate: "Using no way as way" & "Having no limitation as limitation" The arrows represent the endless interaction between yang and yin.[33]Main article: Jeet Kune Do
Jeet Kune Do originated in 1965. A match with Wong Jack Man influenced Lee's philosophy on fighting. Lee believed that the fight had lasted too long and that he had failed to live up to his potential using Wing Chun techniques. He took the view that traditional martial arts techniques were too rigid and formalistic to be practical in scenarios of chaotic street fighting. Lee decided to develop a system with an emphasis on "practicality, flexibility, speed, and efficiency". He started to use different methods of training such as weight training for strength, running for enrance, stretching for flexibility, and many others which he constantly adapted.
Lee emphasized what he called "the style of no style". This consisted of getting rid of a formalized approach which Lee claimed was indicative of traditional styles. Because Lee felt the system he now called Jun Fan Gung Fu was too restrictive, it was developed into a philosophy and martial art he would come to call (after the name was suggested by Dan Inosanto) Jeet Kune Do or the Way of the Intercepting Fist. It is a term he would later regret because Jeet Kune Do implied specific parameters that styles connote whereas the idea of his martial art was to exist outside of parameters and limitations.[34]
Lee directly certified only 3 instructors. Taky Kimura, James Yimm Lee (no relation to Bruce Lee), and Dan Inosanto, are the only instructors certified personally by Lee. Inosanto holds the 3rd rank (Instructor) directly from Bruce Lee in Jeet Kune Do, Jun Fan Gung Fu, and Bruce Lee's Tao of Chinese Gung Fu. Taky Kimura holds a 5th rank in Jun Fan Gung Fu. James Yimm Lee (now deceased) held a 3rd rank in Jun Fan Gung Fu. Ted Wong holds 2nd rank in Jeet Kune Do certified directly by Dan Inosanto. James Yimm Lee and Taky Kimura hold ranks in Jun Fan Gung Fu, not Jeet Kune Do; Taky received his 5th rank in Jun Fan Gung Fu after the term Jeet Kune Do existed. Also Bruce gave Dan all three diplomas on the same day, suggesting perhaps that Bruce wanted Dan to be his protege. All other Jeet Kune Do instructors since Lee's death have been certified directly by Dan Inosanto.
James Yimm Lee, a close friend of Lee, died without certifying additional students. Taky Kimura, to date, has certified only one person in Jun Fan Gung Fu: his son and heir Andy Kimura. Dan Inosanto continued to teach and certify select students in Jeet Kune Do for over 30 years, making it possible for thousands of martial arts practitioners to trace their training lineage back to Bruce Lee. Prior to his death, Lee told his then only two living instructors Inosanto and Kimura (James Yimm Lee had died in 1972) to dismantle his schools. Both Taky Kimura and Dan Inosanto were allowed to teach small classes thereafter, under the guideline "keep the numbers low, but the quality high". Bruce also instructed several World Karate Champions including Chuck Norris, Joe Lewis, and Mike Stone. Between all 3 of them, ring their training with Bruce they won every Karate Championship in the United States.[35]
G. 請問誰能介紹個專業的雅思英語老師,可以面對面或者線上教學的都可以
https://www.douban.com/group/topic/107043128/雅思測試
H. 看北外雅思老師介紹雅思7.0是什麼水平
來自雅思官方2018年白皮書的描述
之前聽過某講座說全球所有雅思考生中只有10%左右成績在7分以上,所以7分算是比較高的分數了,球球身邊的老師基本上全在7.5以上。如果是需要自己考的話其實7分還是很有難度的,一下為沒考過雅思的小夥伴提供一些分數參考依據:
詞彙量的差距
四六級對考生的詞彙量要求大約在4000至6000詞之間,對於參加過高考的孩子來說,真得不算難。雖然雅思考試遠沒有GRE詞彙要求那麼折磨,不過8000以上的詞彙量要求還是讓很多小烤鴨頭疼的。
在詞彙要求上,下面的數據是四六級與雅思的詞彙要求對比,應該說四級詞彙只相當於雅思5-5.5所需的詞彙量,六級的詞彙量高於6.5所需的詞彙量但還達不到不雅思7分。當然,這只能說明雅思對詞彙的要求量較高,並不意味著分數可以同樣進行比對。
考試內容
四六級作為國內應試考試和當前國內英語教學模式是有很大關聯的,四六級更偏重於英語的基本功,也就是讀和寫的能力,而長時間忽視了說和用的重要性,所以說中國大部分學生即使學了很多年英語,依舊是「啞巴英語」。
而雅思意在考察大家對於英語的實際掌握和運用能力,更重視邏輯和思辨能力,真正把英語作為一種語言而非單純的一個科目。
考試流程
眾所周知,四六級考試時間為140分鍾,考試順序是寫作、聽力、閱讀、寫作。
雅思考試分為筆試和口語考試,口語考試一般在筆試之前的某一天進行,時間是11-15分鍾;筆試考試時長180分鍾,順序是聽力、閱讀、寫作,各佔一小時。
聽力部分
四六級聽力共25題,為單項選擇,而在雅思考試中,除單選題外還有填空題、多選題、配對題等,共四十題。
話題上看,雅思聽力的4個Section中的前兩個多涉及一般的校園生活等場景,如租房、入學,後兩個場景以學術類、教育類話題為主,如學術講座、環保問題等等。從話題就可以看出,雅思考試更側重考察語言的實際運用能力。
閱讀部分
四六級閱讀題型包括一篇選詞填空(10題)、一篇段落信息匹配(10題)、兩篇單項選擇(各5題)。除段落信息匹配題所在文章較長外,其餘閱讀平均每篇文章500詞。
雅思閱讀的每篇題型則不定,包括判斷題、填空題、選擇題、標題題、細節配對題、段落配對題六大題型,共計三篇,每篇平均1000詞、約13題,共40題。
難度對比立見高下。
寫作部分
四六級寫作要求是30分鍾內完成一篇150詞的作文,且只要你詞彙量足夠豐富,「高大上」的詞用的夠多,拿下高分其實不難,而雅思寫作分為Task 1和Task 2,分別要求150詞和250詞,且時間限制是1小時,非常考察你的邏輯論證能力,不是秀一秀詞彙量就可以通過的。
Task 1也就是小作文,主要考察表格、曲線圖、柱狀圖、餅圖、流程圖,甚至是地圖等等題型。
Task2也就是大作文,需要考生就某個觀點發表支持和反駁一件,或者討論針鋒相對的一組觀點,針對某種問題分析原因並提出解題辦法。
口語部分
雖然四六級有口語,但是因為不做硬性要求很多小夥伴可能都不知道它的存在,而雅思口語作為雅思考試中非常重要的一項,讓一大批小烤鴨煩到禿頭還是考不到目標分...
通過考試內容就可以感受到四六級和雅思的差距了吧?接下來我們看看還沒入門的小烤鴨比較關心的分數值換算的問題。
分數值換算
早就有各種優秀的小夥伴通過屠鴨前輩們的經驗和各種對比分析四六級和雅思的理論難度,得出一套看似行之有效的分數對比:
還有很多不同的版本。
四級VS雅思
(1)四級達到450分左右,則雅思基本能達到5.0分;
(2)四級達到540分以上,則雅思基本能達到6.0分;
(3)四級達到580分以上,則雅思基本能達到6.5分;
(4)四級達到600分以上,則雅思基本能達到7.0分。
六級VS雅思
(1)六級達到500分左右,則雅思基本能達到5.5-6分
(2)六級達到550分左右,則雅思基本能達到6.5-7分
(3)六級達到600~650分左右,則雅思基本能達到7-7.5分
當然啦~此處必須要告訴小夥伴們的是,雅思考試和四六級雖然都是英語水平測試,但真的hin不!一!樣!如果你們六級考到了550,就覺得自己雅思裸考能上6.5分。emmm...這個鍋球球可堅決不背啊!